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Original Articles

Fear of Crime in Botswana: Impact of Gender, Victimization, and Incivility

Pages 235-253 | Published online: 01 Jun 2011
 

The subject of fear of crime has generated a substantial body of empirical study within Western industrialized society. However, the current focus on comparative criminology inspires efforts to study fear of crime cross culturally. This study attempts to assess some of the widely accepted predictors and conclusions of fear of crime found in developed nations on the urbanized capital city of Botswana. More specifically, in this article, the author explores the relationships between gender, victimization, incivility, and fear of crime in Gaborone, Botswana. Findings suggest that gender, victimization, and, in part, the environment are all useful in explaining fear of crime in Gaborne. However, it appears that gender, more than victimization and incivility, is itself a genuinely powerful determinant of fear of crime.

Notes

Contact information: Joseph Johnson, M.A., School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University, Lansing, MI 48917. Telephone: 517–781–5969. E‐mail: [email protected].

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