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Articles

Reporting to the police in western nations: A theoretical analysis of the effects of social context

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Pages 933-969 | Published online: 19 Aug 2006
 

Abstract

One of the most consistent findings in empirical studies using victimization data is that the decision to report victimization to the police is determined in large part by the seriousness of the crime. The police will be notified more often of crimes that involve more serious injury or greater monetary loss. These findings, however, may be due to the fact that most studies on reporting have been conducted using victimization surveys that devote a great deal of attention to the crime event and victim characteristics and much less to the social context of that event. As a result, influences on reporting operating at the neighborhood, jurisdiction, or nation level have been neglected. The aim of this paper is to bring social context into the discourse on reporting to the police by presenting a much more inclusive model of crime reporting. In addition, the influence of four aspects of macro-level social context on reporting are tested—the perceived competence of the police, institutionalization of insurance business, norm of conformity, and level of individualism—by merging incident-level data from the International Crime Victims Survey (ICVS) for 16 Western industrialized countries with nation-level data from various sources. Hierarchical logistic modeling is used to analyze the nested data. The perceived competence of the police has a positive effect on whether property crimes are reported.

The authors would like to thank three anonymous reviewers, Richard R. Bennett, Ferry Koster, and the members of the NSCR research group “life course, crime, and interventions” for their helpful comments on previous drafts of this article.

The authors would like to thank three anonymous reviewers, Richard R. Bennett, Ferry Koster, and the members of the NSCR research group “life course, crime, and interventions” for their helpful comments on previous drafts of this article.

Notes

The authors would like to thank three anonymous reviewers, Richard R. Bennett, Ferry Koster, and the members of the NSCR research group “life course, crime, and interventions” for their helpful comments on previous drafts of this article.

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