*

Crime Reduction Toolkits

Repeat Victimisation

Crime - Let's bring it down
 
* *
*
* *

 
*
*
Toolkits Homepage
*
Toolkits Content
*
*
Introduction
*
What do we know
*
Local Solutions
*
Tackling The Problem
*
Making It Happen
*
Resources
*
Innovation
*
Practical Tools
*
Contact Points
*
*
*

Toolkit Index

Defining a Victim

At the simplest level, a ‘repeat victim’ could be a person, a place or a thing, such as a car.

  • Repeat victimisation can take a variety of forms. For example:
    The same crime has high levels of repeat victimisation across a geographic area, for example high levels of repeat house burglary;

  • Geographical pockets, for example, a particular housing estate or a car park have high levels of repeat victimisation in one or a number of crime types

  • Particular groups of people are repeat victims, for example, ethnic minorities, witnesses in criminal cases, or students;

  • The same types of organisation are suffering repeat victimisation, for example, schools or hospitals

  • Victims are experiencing different types of crime, for example, a black and minority ethnic person may experience burglary, damage to a car, verbal abuse, graffiti on their property or their children may be bullied at school

Problem oriented crime reduction and repeat victimisation

Many police forces and some local authorities are adopting a problem-oriented approach to crime and disorder reduction, stemming from the problem oriented policing model first developed in the US.

Repeat victimisation is related to problem oriented policing/crime reduction: both approaches work on the basis that past victimisation predicts future victimisation and can be used in complementary ways to tackle crime and disorder.

They differ in that the repeat victim is likely to be more specific, for example a woman who has experienced domestic violence or a repeatedly burgled house. The suggestion is that repeat victimisation can be prevented by intervening after the first victimisation while problem oriented policing tackles problems where there is already a series of events, usually based around a geographical area.

 

<<Contents

 < Previous Section

> Next Section

 

*
   
** Back to Top    Site Help    Search    Contact Us    Site Map    Knowledgebase