The strengths and weaknesses of the survey used by the Home office to measure victimisation will be critically assessed in this essay with relations to the social construction of the contents which will also be analysed to determine whether the statistics

Authors Avatar
'The good news is that the number of people who are victims of crime has fallen by 40% compared to ten years ago. And if people are the victims of crime, their experience of the criminal justice system is vastly improved' (Home office 2005 cited in Walklate 2007:1). Critically assess this statement with respect to victim surveys and the social construction of their contents.

'There are three kinds of lies; lies, damned lies, and statistics'. This semi-ironic statement by Benjamin Disraeli refers to the influential power of numbers and briefly describes how even statistics can be used to strengthen inaccurate arguments. This statement can be related to the above quote cited by the Home office in 2005, who have stated that victimisation has decreased by forty percent over the previous ten years. The strengths and weaknesses of the survey used by the Home office to measure victimisation will be critically assessed in this essay with relations to the social construction of the contents which will also be analysed to determine whether the statistics are used to strengthen inaccurate arguments.

In order to critically assess the Home office statement it is important to acknowledge the origins of crime surveys. Since the 1960s there has been a major interest into the fear of crime for both academic research and policy proposals. The reasoning behind the rapid interest of fear of crime and the reason why fear of crime has only been 'discovered' over the last quarter of the twentieth century has been answered by Hale (1996 p.79), who suggested that the answer

'lies in the growing awareness that fear of crime has consequences beyond a deep-seated sense of personal anxiety.'

The implications of these have been noted by sociologists, the media and politicians. The US was the first to carry out victimisation surveys in order to gather information on the extent of unreported crime known as the 'dark figure' of crime and on the risks of crime (Ennis 1967 cited in Mayhew and Hough 1988). These surveys prompted the birth of comparable crime surveys in international countries including Britain.

Surveys which concentrated primarily on victimisation in Britain appeared in the seventies particularly the survey in London by Sparks, Glenn and Dodd (1977) which was produced to deal with methodological issues (Mayhew and Hough 1988). A number of surveys were also conducted such as crime surveys in Sheffield in 1976 at the University of Sheffield as part of research into the 'Urban Criminal'. Both of these surveys were funded by the Home office, however, a national survey was ruled out largely on the grounds of cost and there were also concerns about the number of estimated unreported crimes that might be created.

A workshop was created in 1981 at the time of urban disorder in Britain by the Home office in order to consider development of a national survey. The national survey would include unreported and unrecorded crime as an index of crime. This in turn would have practical values such as developing crime prevention programmes and also it would provide a more sophisticated idea of crime which may develop a non-biased opinion about law and order. It would also offer more encouragement for criminological research and theory such as fear of crime and attitudes to police. In 1981 the Home Secretary Lord William Whitelaw agreed that the British Crime Survey (BCS) should be developed (Mayhew and Hough 1988). The introduction of the BCS is known to be the result of the 'radical left realism' approach which argued that the BCS was formed due to the lack of information present crime surveys provide to uncover particularly high risks of crime that women, minority groups, ethnic groups and socially disadvantaged people faced (Young 1988). The BCS set out to emphasise victimisation as a 'real' and everyday problem in society according to the left realists. The left realists promised to take victimisation and the victim 'seriously' by bringing together the four core elements in an active response to crime (1) formal social control by police, (2) informal social control by members of the public, (3) the offender and (4) the victim. This response to crime and victims is known as the 'square of crime' (Taylor et al. 1973, cited in Goodey 2005). In 1994 Anderson et al. added a fifth element 'the city' which referred to variables such as gender, age, class and race.
Join now!


The first BCS was conducted in 1982 in England, Wales and Scotland, Scotland now has its own survey (Chambers 1984). The BCS was conducted every two years until 2001 when it was decided that it should be conducted annually. The BCS asks over fifty thousand adults including those over the age of sixteen in private households about their experiences of victimisation over the previous twelve months. One person per household address is selected by a postcode finder to take part in the survey.

The Home office gathers information on crimes and victims of crime from both ...

This is a preview of the whole essay