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Sustaining Evidence-Based Policing in an Era of Cuts: Estimating Fear of Crime at Small Area Level in England

NCJ Number
237625
Journal
Crime Prevention & Community Safety Volume: 14 Issue: 1 Dated: February 2012 Pages: 48-68
Author(s)
Adam Whitworth
Date Published
February 2012
Length
21 pages
Annotation
This study investigated the possibility of estimating the spatial patterning of fear of crime at the small, local area level in England.
Abstract
Fear of crime has become a major focus of attention both for policymakers and within the academic literature and although geography is considered relevant to fear of crime little is known about how it varies spatially. The present article applies multilevel modeling to a newly available geocoded version of the British Crime Survey to explore the feasibility of estimating fear of crime down to small area level across England. Five of the six models are considered sufficiently powerful in explaining the between-area variance to produce estimates. Estimates of fear of crime for these five crime types are produced (with 95 percent credible intervals to indicate their likely precision) for small areas and local authorities in England and are placed in the public domain. The models also highlight, however, that most of the variance in individual's fear of crime is within rather than between small areas, questioning the logic of area-based policies to tackle fear of crime. In an era of public sector resource tightening and targeting, it is hoped that these findings will enable practitioners, policymakers and academics to continue to understand and monitor geographical variations in fear of crime. (Published Abstract)