Analysis of the Crime Survey for England and Wales identifies anger and annoyance rather than fear as the most common emotional responses to victimisation by crime, despite fear’s pre-eminence in the criminological literature. While the trend since 2003 shows an increase in fear relative to anger, anger remains more common for all crime categories and all levels of victim-rated offence seriousness. The writers contend that the mismatch between the preponderance of anger in victim accounts and the preponderance of fear in the academic literature is convenient for government and police. Subtly setting fear as the default ‘appropriate’ emotion to be evoked by victimisation makes for a populace less inclined to ‘take matters into its own hands’...
Violent crime is on the increase. The 1992 British Crime Survey (Mayhew et al, 1993) revealed that ...
A growing body of evidence shows that crime victims’ emotional expressions can influence legal judgm...
Wegrzyn M, Westphal S, Kißler J. In your face: the biased judgement of fear-anger expressions in vio...
Analysis of the Crime Survey for England and Wales identifies anger and annoyance rather than fear a...
Studying the fear of crime is a research field that has grown enormously in the past two decades. Ye...
A previous article demonstrated, from an analysis of data derived from a quantitative survey of 1,62...
This paper presents a new definition of fear of crime that integrates two conceptual developments in...
A large body of empirical research exploring emotional responses to crime in Europe, North America a...
Abstract Anger, its part in human conduct and in crime commission has been much discussed and acc...
Crime and anti-social behaviour are issues of ongoing public concern. Surveys suggest that around 20...
Over the last 40 years and more, a growing number of researchers have explored the links between per...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The <i>Experience and ...
This study assesses the scaling properties of some new measures of the fear of crime. The new concep...
A review of the current literature indicates that, despite the large quantity of research on fear of...
The fear of crime has been recognized as an important social problem in its own right, with a signif...
Violent crime is on the increase. The 1992 British Crime Survey (Mayhew et al, 1993) revealed that ...
A growing body of evidence shows that crime victims’ emotional expressions can influence legal judgm...
Wegrzyn M, Westphal S, Kißler J. In your face: the biased judgement of fear-anger expressions in vio...
Analysis of the Crime Survey for England and Wales identifies anger and annoyance rather than fear a...
Studying the fear of crime is a research field that has grown enormously in the past two decades. Ye...
A previous article demonstrated, from an analysis of data derived from a quantitative survey of 1,62...
This paper presents a new definition of fear of crime that integrates two conceptual developments in...
A large body of empirical research exploring emotional responses to crime in Europe, North America a...
Abstract Anger, its part in human conduct and in crime commission has been much discussed and acc...
Crime and anti-social behaviour are issues of ongoing public concern. Surveys suggest that around 20...
Over the last 40 years and more, a growing number of researchers have explored the links between per...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>The <i>Experience and ...
This study assesses the scaling properties of some new measures of the fear of crime. The new concep...
A review of the current literature indicates that, despite the large quantity of research on fear of...
The fear of crime has been recognized as an important social problem in its own right, with a signif...
Violent crime is on the increase. The 1992 British Crime Survey (Mayhew et al, 1993) revealed that ...
A growing body of evidence shows that crime victims’ emotional expressions can influence legal judgm...
Wegrzyn M, Westphal S, Kißler J. In your face: the biased judgement of fear-anger expressions in vio...