DOES THE REGION OF WHERE SOMEONE LIVES HAVE AN EFFECT ON WHAT CRIME THEY COMMIT? By: Alyssa Lefebvre Soc 240- Social Welfare Final Presentation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A merican C ivicsHOLT HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON1 Chapter 16 Citizenship and the Law Section 1:Crime in the United States Section 2:The Criminal Justice.
Advertisements

Crime and Criminal Justice
Racial Disparities in Criminal Justice in Wisconsin Pamela Oliver.
Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 2006 National Report Juvenile Offenders and Victims: 2006 National Report Graphs from Chapter 5: Law Enforcement and Juvenile.
Chapter 8 Section 2 CRIME.
Criminology and Measuring Crime
Uniform Crime Report (UCR) FBI Compiles data from the nation’s law enforcement agencies on crime for: Numbers of arrests Reports of crimes This is the.
2014 Minneapolis Crime Totals Statistics verified and completed on 1/12/2015 CRIME yr % Chg Homicide % Rape % Robbery %
Crime Chapter 8 Section 2. Crime Prohibited by law Punishable by the government.
Are unemployment rates indicative of property crime rates? Will states with the least amount of unemployment have less property crime? Jeremy Aiello Soc
BUT THE UK IS FOR GENTLEMEN FROM THEN TILL NOW What is Crime? Crime is behavior that breaks those rules of a society which are codified in the criminal.
JEANNETTE SENIOR HIGH SCHOOL Crime in America. The Nature of Crimes Crime – Something one does or fails to do in violation of a law Crimes are behaviors.
Chapter 2 Crime and Criminals Irwin/McGraw-Hill
Polling and Measuring Public Opinion on Juvenile Justice Issues.
Crime and the Police Presented By Zhang yuanyuan and Zhang xiaoling.
Chapter 2 – The Nature and Extent of Crime
Chapter 4, Crime and Violence The Global Context: International Crime and Violence Sources of Crime Statistics Sociological Theories of Crime and Violence.
The Nature of Crime and Victimization Is crime really a significant problem? Is crime increasing or decreasing? Is crime becoming more serious? Where and.
Bobby Renaud SOC December 4,  When looking at violent crime and motor vehicle theft, do we see a relationship? If so how significantly ?
Crime Chapter 8 Section 2. Crime Prohibited by law Punishable by the government.
Law and Courts Chapter Write a story using the following words: Underline each of these words in your story Simple Assault Criminal Homicide Robbery.
SOC101Y Introduction to Sociology Professor Robert Brym Lecture #10 Crime and Deviance 23 Nov 2011.
Juvenile Crime and Punishment. Causes of Youth Violence Complex interplay of factors Correlations, not predictions Accumulation of risk Number of resources.
Crime in America Street Law Chapter 7.
Kelly Mascari.  Are there more crimes committed by non High School graduates than High School graduates?
Data Analysis Lab 02 Using Crosstabs to compare percentages.
© 2003 Wadsworth Publishing Co. Chapter 3 The Nature and Extent of Crime Criminology 8 th Edition Larry J. Siegel.
The Nature of Crime and Victimization Chapter 2.  Primary sources for measuring crime are:  Official Data (Uniform Crime Reports)  Victim Surveys (National.
Crime and Deviance.
2014 Minneapolis Crime Totals Statistics verified and completed on 1/12/2015 CRIME yr % Chg Homicide % Rape % Robbery %
Copyright © 2012 Carolina Academic Press Chapter 1: Crime in California Georgia Spiropoulos.
Chapter 7 Prison Populations Size and Nature of Prison Populations Severity of legal sanctions General social-demographic trends –Aging of population.
Source: John Jay College calculations of national arrest estimates using data from Crime in the United States, 1980 through Washington, DC: Federal.
History of Criminal Identification. In The Beginning Only had people’s names Then went to photographs and names What was the issue with this process?
Crime. There ought to be a law against…. Come up with 5 laws you think should be passed. Think about problems in the community, school, and society as.
Muskie School of Public Service 2008 Maine Crime and Justice Data Book March, 2009.
Racial Disparities in Criminal Justice in Wisconsin Pamela Oliver.
CJ 102 Unit 2. Primary Sources of Crime Data Uniform Crime Reports (UCR) National Incident-Based Reporting System (NIBRS) National Crime Victimization.
Crime Any act that is labeled as such by those in authority, is prohibited by law, and is punishable by the gov’t.
Number of Offenses NationalMaricopa County Violent Crimes Property Crimes -0.2% -4.3% -3.8% -5.5% Violent crimes: murder, rape, robbery, aggravated assault.
Chapter Two CRIME AWARENESS Uniform Crime Reporting System (UCRS) The FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting System began in U.S. Attorney General authorized.
CJ 102 Criminology. Chapter Two: The Nature and Extent of Crime.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON1 CIVICS IN PRACTICE HOLT Chapter 16 Citizenship and the Law Section 1:Crime in the United States Crime in the United StatesCrime.
Crime and Juvenile Justice Ch. 20, pp Crime in American Society 10 million property crimes 1.5 million violent crimes Costs us billions of dollars.
Chapter 2: Extent of Crime and Victimization Race and Crime, 3e © SAGE Publications 2012.
Crime and Social Control. Crime Definition: An act that is labeled as such by those in authority, is prohibited by law, and is punishable by the government.
Crime and Punishment Unit Four Lesson Two Teacher’s Edition.
CRIME. CRIME STATISTICS Crime – any act labeled by those in authority, prohibited by law, and punishable by the government Limits on Formal Filing of.
Juvenile Crime rates and Violent Adult Crime By Noel Williams.
Race and the Relationship to Juvenile Adjudication
Chapter 9 The Criminal Justice System
CRIME AWARENESS.
Prisoners: Characteristics of U.S. Inmate Populations
Crime Data.
Crime Chapter 7 Section 3.
Juvenile Crime: Explanations and Differences From Adults
Crime in America.
Sources of Crime Data The Uniform Crime Report
Chapter 2 The Nature and Extent of Delinquency
Crime in the United States
Understanding the Criminal Justice System
CHAPTER 7 SECTION 3 CRIME.
Chapter 16 Citizenship and the Law
Crime in the United States
Chapter 16 Citizenship and the Law
Crime in the United States
Warm Up (use 5.1) 1. What is deviance?
Is the death penalty a fair sentence?
Chapter 7 Section 5: Crime and Punishment
Deviance & Social Control
Presentation transcript:

DOES THE REGION OF WHERE SOMEONE LIVES HAVE AN EFFECT ON WHAT CRIME THEY COMMIT? By: Alyssa Lefebvre Soc 240- Social Welfare Final Presentation

LITERATURE REVIEW A study was done and it was found that urbanity was a main factor of property crime and urbanity and population density are factors of violent crimes. Also unemployment plays a part in rural property crime. One thing that was similar in all the research was that urban areas received most of the attention and it was harder to obtain data from non- urban areas. It was found that the South region was unrelated to all crimes but had a strong relation to the homicide rates and the percentage of blacks was the strongest factor. (Kposowa) In the 25 years since the birth of Youth & Policy, recorded youth and adult crime rates in England and Wales at first rose sharply, but then in 1992 it declined. Between 1992 and 2002 the number of year olds that were convicted, cautioned, reprimanded or warned for different offenses, also fell by over a quarter. Throughout the study it was stated that the most street and gang crime would happen within Britain’s poorest neighborhoods. (Pitts) According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) (2006), 52% of sentenced state prison inmates committed violent offenses and 21% are serving time for property crimes. This study collects data within the USA and found that seven Southern States have the lowest prison sentences for Fringe Laws, while some Northwestern states seem to be more lenient on the Fringe Laws. (Clement)

LITERATURE REVIEW CONTINUED One study gathered data from 13 rural counties within east-central Georgia. The variables that had a relation to property and violent crimes were unemployment, poverty, race, and family dependence on government assistance. It was concluded that these variables listed were factors that led to more rural property crimes which would be considered larceny, theft, arson, burglary, and auto theft rather than violent crimes which were homicide, rape, robbery, and aggravated assault. (Arthur) When dealing with drug crimes, it was found that in the United States over half of federal inmates are in prison due to drug charge. Also since the 1970s in Canada, drug offenses have been responsible for more than a third of growth in the imprisoned population. Since 1980 these incarceration rates have only increased. Lastly, one more finding was that within the United States drug arrests have more than tripled within the last 25 years. (Grant)

WORKS CITED Arthur, J. A. (1991). SOCIOECONOMIC PREDICTORS OF CRIME IN RURAL GEORGIA. Criminal Justice Review (Georgia State University), 16(1), Clement, K., & Barbrey, J. (2008). Criminal Laws on the Fringe: An Analysis of Legislated Punishments for Morality Crimes in the 50 States. Critical Criminology, 16(2), doi: /s z Grant, J. (2009). A Profile of Substance Abuse, Gender, Crime, and Drug Policy in the United States and Canada. Journal Of Offender Rehabilitation, 48(8), doi: / Kposowa, A. J., Breault, K. D., & Harrison, B. M. (1995). Reassessing the structural covariates of violent and property crimes in the USA: A county level analysis. British Journal Of Sociology, 46(1), Pitts, J. (2008). The Changing Shape of Youth Crime. Youth & Policy, (100),

DATA SOURCE USED I used the data on Education and Crime The data was for self-reported crime regressions in a 1980 survey This included all black and white males from the cross-section sample, with a poor white oversample and black oversample

DATA ANALYSIS First… Highlight the data Copy it Pasted it on a new excel sheet Then, I deleted all of the unnecessary variables that I didn’t need to answer my question, by highlighting the appropriate columns, right click, then delete I was then left with the following variables: vioclr, drugcr, propcr, and reg* From the Codebook… violcr dummy variable = 1 if respondent committed a serious violent crime in past year (positive number of times used force to obtain things or attacked someone with the idea of seriously hurting or killing them) drugcr dummy variable = 1 if respondent reported selling drugs in past year propcr dummy variable = 1 if respondent reported committing a serious property crime in past year (positive number of times shoplifting or stealing something worth $50 or more from someone/somewhere other than a store) reg* dummy variable = 1 if living in region (s = South, ne = Northeast, nc = North Central, w = West)

Here are the narrowed down variables that are needed to receive the answer

DATA ANALYSIS CONTINUED Now for the Pivot Tables… Highlight all the data from columns A-I Go to Insert, Pivot Table Drag the variables to the correct place: Region to Row Label, and the Crime to the Column Label Right click on the data in the table, select value field settings, then change from count to % of Row Total Repeat steps for all 12 pivot tables To Make a Bar Graph… From the pivot table, I highlighted and copied the percentages of the people who did commit a crime within the region and pasted it next to the pivot table Then I clicked on those percentages after doing it for all of the four regions Lastly, select insert bar graph, and label it appropriately Repeat steps for all 3 charts

DATA ANALYSIS CONTINUED Next… Violent Crime Pivot Tables

Drug Crime Pivot Tables

Property Crime Pivot Tables

DATA ANALYSIS CONTINUED

FINDINGS Based on Violent Crimes Committed: Based on Drug Crimes Committed: Based on Property Crimes Committed: In North East Region11.04% In North Central Region10.25% In South Region9.14% In West Region9.62% In North East Region2.62% In North Central Region3.49% In South Region2.80% In West Region3.56% In North East Region17.84% In North Central Region16.37% In South Region13.74% In West Region22.51% The North East Region has highest % The West Region has highest %