International Crime Victims Survey

Why victims surveys

Reliable Crime statistics are hard to come by. Crimes recorded by the police and other authorities are a main source of information but have their limitations, these limitations are discussed in the Crime statistics article. An alternative is a victimisation survey (or victim study) in which a random sample of the population is asked about their experiences with crime and victimisation. Many countries have such surveys. They give a much better account for the volume crimes but are less accurate for crimes that occur with a (relative) low frequency such as homicide, or victimless 'crimes' such as drug (ab)use.

International comparison

Attempts to use the data from these national surveys for international comparison have failed. Differences in definitions of crime and other methodological differences are too big for proper comparison.

A group of European criminologists (Jan van Dijk, Dutch Ministry of Justice - Pat Mayhew, British Home Office - Martin Killias, Lausanne University[1]) started an international victimisation study with the sole purpose to generate international comparative crime and victimisation data. The project is now known as the International Crime Victims Survey (ICVS). After the first round in 1989, the surveys were repeated in 1992, 1996, and 2000 and 2004/2005. The United Nations (UNICRI) got involved in the project in 1992 to organise the surveys in the developing countries and in Eastern Europe.

To date

More than 70 countries have participated at least once over the years. Not only provides this study comparative data, but thanks to the longitudinal aspect also provides data on trends in crime for a number of participating countries.

Organisation

The Dutch Ministry of Justice and the British Home Office have been the driving forces behind the project over the years. A European study based on the instrument and methodology of the ICVS is the European Survey on Crime and Safety (the EU ICS). This survey was done in 2005 in 18 EU member states and financed in part by the European Union. The EU ICS was executed by a consortium led by Gallup Europe. UNICRI was involved for organising the surveys in the rest of the world in 2004/05. The latest report with key findings was written by INTERVICT, the knowledge centre for victimology of Tilburg University and the Dutch Ministry of Justice in collaboration with key researchers from the participating countries. The data from the ICVS and the data from the EU ICS are available for academics for further analysis.

Near future

The 6th round of surveys is scheduled for spring 2009. The organisation of the ICVS-6 is with a group of government based research institutes that have a provisional secretariat at the Dutch Ministry of Justice and the British Home Office. The United Nations will concentrate on victimisation surveys in developing countries.

Contents

Methodology

Text is under construction, info from .. [2]

Content of the questionnaire

Other topics covered in the ICVS and EU ICS

The European Survey on Crime and Safety (EU ICS)[3]

This EU funded project builds on the ICVS methodology and the results are fully compatible with the ICVS. The EU ICS results have been published separately [1] and in combination with the ICVS in other countries [2]

Countries participating

Key results from the 2004/05 ICVS and EU ICS

Key publications and further reading

ICVS-5 (2004/05)

ICVS-4 (2000)

ICVS-3 (1996)

ICVS-2 (1992)

ICVS-1 (1989)

See also

External links

Notes

  1. ^ Van Dijk, J.J.M., Mayhew, P. & Killias, M. (1990). Experiences of crime across the world: Key findings from the 1989 International Crime Survey. Deventer: Kluwer Law and Taxation.
  2. ^ Van Dijk, J.J.M., van Kesteren, J.N. & Smit, P. (2008). Criminal Victimization in International Perspective, Key findings from the 2004-2005 ICVS and EU ICS. The Hague, Boom Legal Publishers
  3. ^ EUICS
  4. ^ a b http://rechten.uvt.nl/icvs/pdffiles/ICVScountries.pdf