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Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses
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Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Dec 24, 2015

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Page 1: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Criminal Violence in the United States

Sources of Information/Data/TrendsSpecific Violent Offenses

Page 2: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Questions about Violence

• How much violence is there in the United States?• Is violence increasing, decreasing or stable?• How do we compare to other nations? • Specific forms of violence• Homicide • Robbery• Rape• Assault

Page 3: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Sources of Information on Criminal Violence

• Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) data• Homicide, Robbery, Aggravated Assault • National Crime Victimization Study (NCVS)• Assaults, Robbery, Sexual Assault • Other data• Self-reported crime (less serious forms)• School safety report

Page 4: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

NCVS Trends for Violence

Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics: http://bjs.gov

Page 5: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Source: Homicide Trends in the United States, 1980-2008(U.S. Department of Justice, 2011).

Page 6: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Current UCR Data• Crimes “known to the police”• Expressed in rates per 100,000 citizens

2011 Data for U.S. and Minnesota(http://www.fbi.gov/about-us/cjis/ucr)

Homicide Rape Robbery Aggravated Assault

14,612 4.7 83,425 27 354,396 113 751,131 241

74 1.4 1,664 31 3,386 63.4 6,701 125

Page 7: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

The Crime/Violence Decline

•How do we explain the crime decline?•What were your thoughts about cases of

homicide? • Can they explain why homicide and

other serious violence decreased? •Why do 68-70% of Americans think

crime is getting worse? •Gallop Poll, 2006-2011

Page 8: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Homicide

▪ Definition: the taking of life by another human

▪ Classification▪ Justifiable homicide▪ First-degree murder▪ Second-degree murder▪ Voluntary manslaughter▪ Involuntary manslaughter

Page 9: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Homicides in Context • Demographics • Roughly 90% of homicides perpetrated by males, and

80% of victims are male• Almost all homicides (90%) are within race, and most

(about 70%) are classified nonstranger• African Americans disproportionally likely to be victims

and perpetrators

• Circumstances • The most common circumstance for homicide is an argument • 68% of homicides caused by firearms (largely handguns)

• Neighborhood level differences• The ecology of violence, social disorganization

Page 10: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

“Its about homicide dummy!”

• The United States has a higher homicide rate than other industrialized countries• The difference in firearms death is apparent (5 to 10

higher)• Also more 2-3 times more likely to murder without

firearms • Victimization surveys from other countries indicate that

we are similar to other countries in our level of nonlethal violence• Canada, Great Brittan, Australia

• An aside: property crime is lower in the U.S. than many other industrialized countries

Page 11: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Country Homicides (per 100,000) 2004

United States 5.9Chile 5.5Cuba 6Kenya 6.7Canada 1.5Japan 0.5Germany 1France 1.6Rwanda 26.6El Salvador 56.4Colombia 61.1

Page 12: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Explaining America’s High Homicide Rate: Usual Suspects

1. Firearm availability2. Economic inequality3. Frontier culture/legacy of violence

Page 13: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Firearm Availability

▪ Strong predictor of homicide rates ▪ U.S. household handgun ownership: 30%▪ Most other industrialized nations: 1–14%▪ U.S. non-gun homicide rate: 2.5 times

higher than other industrialized nations▪ U.S. gun-related homicide: 7.5 times

higher than other industrialized nations

Page 14: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

The Gun Control Debate

▪ Federal Gun Control Act ▪ Dealers must be licensed, document sales, refrain from

selling guns to prohibited buyers, etc

▪ Brady Bill: Mandatory 5-day waiting period, Background checks

▪ Little evidence that they reduce homicide▪ Secondary guns market is completely unregulated.▪ Firearms can be purchased illegally.▪ Firearms may be stolen or borrowed

Page 15: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

American History

▪ Sociocultural tradition of violence? ▪ American Revolution▪ Slavery▪ Civil War▪ Treatment of Native Americans

▪ Criticism: other nations with cultural histories of violence have low homicide rates today (Japan)

Page 16: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Economic Inequality

▪ Institutional anomie theory, Elliott Currie’s “market society”

▪ High level of economic inequality ▪ Low level of social support

▪ Criticism = why does this effect homicide and not other forms of violence? U.S. similar to Canada and others for assaults and such.

Page 17: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Columbine, Sandy Hook, Aurora…

• As “Public Mass Shootings”• “School Shootings” and school violence

Page 18: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Public Mass Shootings

• Public Mass Shootings in the United States: Selected Implications for Federal Public Health and Safety Policy• Congressional Research Service, www.crs.org, March 2013

• What counts? • Public Places x 4 or more deaths

• How many occur?• 78 public mass shootings have occurred in the United

States since 1983 • 547 Deaths (1000+ Casualties)

Page 19: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Violence in Schools

• Key Publication • Indicators of School Crime and Safety: 2011

(2012). Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Education

• Violent Deaths at Schools• Other Violence at Schools

Page 20: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Violent Deaths in School

Page 21: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Violent Victimizations

Page 22: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Rape and Sexual Assault

▪ Rape▪ Unlawful sexual intercourse by force

or without legal or factual consent• Debate on “force,” and issues of

“initial consent”

▪ Sexual assault▪ Defined as: any forced or coerced

sexual intimacy

Page 23: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Rape Information

▪ One of the most underreported crimes▪ The way rape or sexual assault is

defined impacts estimates• Force vs. Coercion, Rape vs. Sexual

Assault▪ Certain types of rape are reported

disproportionately• Stranger vs. Acquaintance

Page 24: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Rape & Sexual Assault Estimates

▪ U.S. rape rate ▪ 63 per 100,000 women (UCR)

▪ National Violence Against Women survey▪ 18% of women and 3% of men experienced

(completed or attempted) rape over lifetime▪ At higher education institutions, as high as

20 to 25% of women over college career

▪ Rape most likely perpetrated by non-strangers

Page 25: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Date Rape

▪ In the context of dating arrangement ▪ One of the most underreported rapes▪ Largely unrecognized until the 1980sDate-rape drugs

▪ Examples: GHB, Rohypnol, and Ketamine▪ Render the victim physically helpless▪ Make the victim unable to remember

Page 26: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Marital Rape

▪ Only recently legally recognized▪ Greatly underreported▪ Estimates 8–23%▪ Strong relationship between battering

and marital rape

Page 27: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Explaining Rape and Sexual Assault

▪ Motivation of the offender ▪ Sex?▪ Violence (sex as a weapon)?▪ Political/cultural dominance?

Page 28: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Feminist Explanation

▪ Rape = violence, not sex▪ Maintain control and dominance▪ Consequence of deep-seated social

tradition▪ Male dominance & Female exploitation

▪ Cross-cultural studies find a relationship between gender inequality and rape

Page 29: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Feminist Explanation II

▪ Rape myths influence male behavior▪ Women secretly desire to be raped,

Women who dress or act seductively are asking to be raped, When a woman says “no” to a sexual advance, she actually means “yes.”

• Masculine sex role socialization▪ Aggressive, Forceful, Avoid being

empathetic, Not relationship oriented

Page 30: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Social Learning Perspective

▪ Sexual aggression learned ▪ Behavior shaped by balance of

▪ Role models▪ Reinforcement/punishment ▪ Attitudes and values • Rape myths, other cognitive distortions as

“negative reinforcement” • Socialization to sex roles• Lack of social skills to express sexuality

normally

Page 31: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Pornography and Rape

▪ Reasons to suspect connection▪ Reflection of patriarchy ▪ Makes women’s

inequality/submission sexy▪ Reinforces rape myths ▪ Provides role modeling for sexual

violence▪ Yet, no clear evidence to support this

theory

Page 32: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Rape and Correctional Intervention

▪ Aversion therapy ▪ Chemical castration ▪ Cognitive-behavioral programs

▪ Eliminate cognitive distortions▪ Teach cognitive skills

▪ Self-control▪ Problem solving▪ Anger management• EMPATHY

Page 33: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

The Criminal Justice Response to Rape (1 of 2)

▪ Often difficult for the victim (“Re-victimize”)▪ Must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that

a crime occurred▪ Police officers: interrogation▪ Defense attorneys: must advocate for defendant▪ Prosecutors: represent the state, must build

solid case, difficult to prove coercion

Page 34: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

The Criminal Justice Response to Rape (2 of 2)

▪ Hospital as key institution for investigation▪ Medical examination ▪ Collection of physical evidence▪ Reluctant partner

▪ Proposed solution: rape crisis center▪ Primary interface between victims and other

agencies▪ Sole focus on victim support

Page 35: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Robbery

▪ Taking of another person’s property by force or threat of force

▪ Statistics▪ Decreasing since the early 1990s ▪ 30% of all serious violent crimes

recorded

Page 36: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Characteristics of Robbery/Robbers

▪ Majority perpetrated by a stranger▪ May involve multiple offenders ▪ Often interracial crime▪ Majority young, African-American, male ▪ Common locations of robberies

▪ Street (43%)▪ Restaurants/stores (15%) ▪ Residences (14%)

Page 37: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Explaining Robbery (1 of 2)

▪ Primary motivation: money and/or property

▪ Secondary motivations ▪ Maintain a street reputation of “bad

ass” ▪ Fuel participation in street culture▪ Psychological thrill▪ Intimidation▪ Revenge

Page 38: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Robbery and Rationality (1 of 2)

▪ Rational approach to robbery▪ Less time than alternatives ▪ Yields cash▪ Avoids middlemen ▪ Prey on vulnerable victims

(especially those involved in crime)

Page 39: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Robbery and Rationality (2 of 2)

▪ Situational crime prevention▪ Target-hardening techniques▪ Individuals should avoid being

vulnerable targets▪ Travel in groups▪ Avoid displaying cash in public places▪ Refrain from criminal activity

Page 40: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Assault (1 of 2)

▪ Aggravated assault ▪ Unlawful attack to inflict injury on a

person▪ Usually involves a weapon

▪ Simple assault▪ Does not involve a weapon ▪ Does not result in serious injury

Page 41: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Assault (2 of 2)

▪ Estimated 40–60% of assaults reported▪ Reasons for not reporting

▪ Assault involves family members▪ Fear of reprisal▪ Failure to view the assault as serious▪ Desire to keep the matter private

▪ Characteristics of assault ▪ Perpetrators overwhelmingly young males▪ Similar to homicide

Page 42: Criminal Violence in the United States Sources of Information/Data/Trends Specific Violent Offenses.

Explaining the Violence Drop▪ Police tactics▪ Increase in prison populations ▪ Economic conditions▪ Changes in demographics▪ Cultural shift ▪ Role of illicit drugs

BE SKEPTICAL OF A “SINGLE” CAUSE