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Crime Reduction Toolkits

Repeat Victimisation

Crime - Let's bring it down
 
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Nature and Extent of repeat victimisation

The extent of repeat victimisation

Domestic burglary:: one study showed that once a house had been burgled its chance of repeat victimization was four times the rate of houses that had not been burgled before.

(Forrester D et al (1988) The Kirkholt Burglary Prevention Project Rochdale Crime prevention Unit Paper 13. London: Home Office)

Domestic violence: estimates are that only 10% of domestic violence to women involves an isolated event, and that the other 90% involves systematic beatings often with escalating violence.

(Hanmer J. and Stanko E A (1985) 'Stripping away the rhetoric of protection: violence to women law and the state in Britain and the USA' International Journal of the Sociology of Law 13 (p.357-74).

Motor Vehicle theft: : a quarter of respondents experienced more than one incident. 8% of victims accounted for 22% of the incidents measured in the three surveys.

(Mayhew P., Aye-Maung N., & Mirrlees-Black C (1993) The 1992 British Crime Survey. Home Office Research Study 132. London: HMSO.

Racial attacks: 67% of families in one estate in East London were repeat victims

(Sampson, A. & Phillips, C. (1992) Multiple Racial Attacks on an East London Estate. Crime Prevention Unit Paper 36. London. Home Office.

Crime on industrial estates: work in Trafford found that a quarter of premises on industrial estates accounted for three quarters of all burglaries on these estates

(Johnson S D Bowers K and Hirschfield A (1997) 'New Insights into the Spatial and Temporal Distribution of Repeat Victimisation' in British Journal of Criminology 37 (p.224-241).

School burglary and property crime: 98% of the total crimes recorded by 33 schools on Merseyside were repeat crimes

Burquest, R, et al. (1992) 'Lessons from Schools'. Policing, 8. P148-155.)

Bullying: a study in a comprehensive school in Sussex showed that 9-10% of pupils had been bullied weekly or more

Assaults: a study in an A&E department showed that 43% of victims of violence reported at least one previous assault, 27% reported involvement in more than two previous assaults, 7% of males reported more than ten previous assaults.

Shepherd JP (1990) Violent crime in Bristol: An Accident and Emergency Department Perspective. British Journal of Criminology 30: 289-305

(Adapted from Cressida Bridgeman & Louise Hobbs (1997) Preventing Repeat Victimisation: the police officer’s guide . Police Research Group. London. Home Office.

For a number of reasons the extent and nature of repeat victimisation have tended to remain hidden, although many practitioners at a local level have been aware of repeatedly victimised people and places. However, a pattern has emerged from various research studies carried out in the UK, as well as the British Crime Survey.

The British Crime Survey

The recorded crime figures represent those offences recorded by the police. Not all offences are reported and not all reported offences are recorded. For that reason, the Home Office conduct the British Crime Survey.

The British Crime Survey (BCS) is a very important source of information about levels of crime and public attitudes to crime. The BCS measures the amount of crime in England and Wales by asking people about crimes they have experienced in the previous year. The BCS includes crimes, which are not reported to the police, so it is an important alternative to police records.

The British Crime Survey (2000) highlighted that 4% of victims account for between 38 and 44% of all crime reported to the survey. The link below is to a table from the BCS 2000 gives figures for the number of times victims were victimised in 1999:

Click here for a types of crime table

figures taken from Kershaw et al. The 2000 British Crime Survey for England & Wales. Home Office Statistical Bulletin 18/00. London. Home Office. Table A2.9. p68.

http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs/hosb1800.pdf

The figures indicate that preventing repeat victimisation to zero will, for example, reduce burglary by 25% and domestic violence by 47%.

The BCS 2000 also shows that if a person has been the victim of crime during the previous year, they have a much higher perception of risk of being the victim of various types of crime, than if they have not been a victim. See link below.

Click here for a table demonstrating the perceived risk of crime.

(figures taken from Kershaw et al. The 2000 British Crime Survey for England & Wales. Home Office Statistical Bulletin 18/00. London. Home Office. Table A7.5. p98.

http://www.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs/hosb1800.pdf

There is also similar data indicating that a higher percentage of people who have been the victim of crime are very worried about crime.

These types of finding are backed up by evidence from the Scottish Crime Survey carried out in 1996. This showed that 35-40% of all property crimes were committed against 3-4% of respondents, and 1.2% of respondents suffered 40% of personal crime.

(MVA Consultancy (1998) Main Findings from the 1996 Scottish Crime Survey. Edinburgh: HMSO)

Research & Development

There is now a substantial and growing body of research as evidence for the repeat victimisation pattern. The research has also started to address the issue of why repeat victimisation occurs. A full list of publications is given in the publications section but key projects include:

Click here for a summary of research findings

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