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Understanding and Responding to Crime and Older People

NCJ Number
190952
Author(s)
Marianne James
Date Published
June 2001
Length
13 pages
Annotation
This paper examines the nature, causes, and ways of countering crimes against the elderly in Australia, as well as the elderly's fear of crime.
Abstract
When examining and responding to crime against older people, there are three issues that must be addressed: crime and abuse, fear of crime, and "inter-sectoral" responses. the first of these issues, crime and abuse, involves personal crime, crime that stems from the dependence of the elderly on others for their care, and economic crime. The broad pattern of victimization for personal crime (homicide, assault, robbery, and burglary) in Australia is consistent with findings throughout Western countries, i.e., older people are less likely to be victims of such crime than other age groups. On the other hand, when older people require support and assistance from families or professional service providers because of frailty and dependence, their vulnerability to victimization increases. An Australian study (Kurrie, Sadler, and Cameron, 1992) estimated that 4.6 percent of older people are victims of physical, sexual, or financial abuse perpetrated mostly by family members and those who are in a duty-of-care relationship with the victim. The term "economic crime" encompasses financial mismanagement, fraud, and enduring power-of-attorney and guardianship issues. There are five levels of fear of crime that require different responses: apathy, apprehension, alarm, torment, and terror. In addressing crime against the elderly, as well as the fear of crime, there must be a uniformity of response that can only be achieved through "inter-sectoral" cooperation. This should involve social service departments, health services, local government, housing departments, the police, the courts, senior citizen organizations, recreational and educational institutions, and voluntary organizations. Appropriate intervention and partnership depends on three components that relate to vulnerability: the actual risks of crime, the impact of crime on the victim, and the consequences of fear for both the victim and the community as a whole.