Return to search

The fear of crime : an analysis and development of theory and method

This thesis considers research into the 'fear of crime'. It examines common methodological, conceptual and theoretical problems and addresses a number of these concerns. The first of two parts provides a history of the debate surrounding 'fear of crime' that has taken place in academic and policy arenas during the past 20 years. This was informed by in-depth interviews with twenty-eight academic and Home Office criminologists who have researched and written on the subject. Combined with a review of the literature, this afforded a detailed examination of weaknesses in frameworks of many quantitative studies. This articulated the research problems for the second part of the thesis: the common failure to (1) theoretically define the construct 'fear of crime' and empirically validate measurement tools; and (2) apply and test a coherent model of the phenomenon andits shaping factors. The second part of the thesis also had two stages. First, twenty-four in-depth interviews were conducted with a convenience sample of residents in two contrasting areas of London. Cognitive question testing procedures were used to examine standard survey questions. This fed into the development of new measures which were fielded in a postal survey of a pure random sample of residents from the same two areas (a response rate of 27% yielded a sample of 479). These data were analysed and the measures were found to have adequate scaling properties. Second, structural equation modelling of the data allowed the successful assessment of a new psychological model of fear of crime. This built on Ferraro (1995): the one (sociological) study that has avoided many of the theoretical and methodological limitations of other studies. The theoretical framework specified that the frequency of worry about the possibility of victimisation was shaped by the appraisal of threat, which in turn was predicted by perceptions of aspects of the environment hypothesised to symbolise the threat of victimisation.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:402168
Date January 2003
CreatorsJackson, Jonathan Paul
PublisherLondon School of Economics and Political Science (University of London)
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation

Page generated in 0.0015 seconds