This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross-sectional data from the OHS97 survey of South Africa, we show that victims report significantly lower well-being than the non-victims, ceteris paribus. The calculated ‘compensating variation’ suggests that it would take, on average, an extra $10,000 per month to offset the psychological costs of crime. Happiness is lower for nonvictimized respondents currently living in higher crime areas. However, we find a strong evidence for females that criminal victimization hurts, but hurts less if the crime rate on our reference group is high.Happiness ; Quality of Life ; Crime ; Stigma ; South Africa
This paper extends research on the relation between crime and happiness by investigating the impact ...
Public perceptions of crime and victimisation can influence an individual's subjective well-being. R...
The costs of violent crime victimisation are often left to a judge, tribunal or jury to determine; l...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
A victimisation study conducted among 3300 householders in South Africa’s Nelson Mandela Metropolita...
This paper uses 2005 Malawian data to investigate the link between crime and happiness in Malawi. De...
This paper extends research on the relation between crime and happiness by investigating the impact ...
A study is presented on the influence of criminal victimization on well-being and fear within a nati...
This paper examines the impact of being a victim of violent or property crime on labour market outco...
Crime hurts victims financially and often physically. This paper examines how individual well-being ...
This thesis studies the determinants of subjective well-being, with the main focus on the data relat...
This paper uses the UK Household Longitudinal Study to explore the relationship between victimisatio...
This paper extends research on the relation between crime and happiness by investigating the impact ...
Public perceptions of crime and victimisation can influence an individual's subjective well-being. R...
The costs of violent crime victimisation are often left to a judge, tribunal or jury to determine; l...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
This paper is the first of its kind to study quality of life responses of crime victims. Using cross...
A victimisation study conducted among 3300 householders in South Africa’s Nelson Mandela Metropolita...
This paper uses 2005 Malawian data to investigate the link between crime and happiness in Malawi. De...
This paper extends research on the relation between crime and happiness by investigating the impact ...
A study is presented on the influence of criminal victimization on well-being and fear within a nati...
This paper examines the impact of being a victim of violent or property crime on labour market outco...
Crime hurts victims financially and often physically. This paper examines how individual well-being ...
This thesis studies the determinants of subjective well-being, with the main focus on the data relat...
This paper uses the UK Household Longitudinal Study to explore the relationship between victimisatio...
This paper extends research on the relation between crime and happiness by investigating the impact ...
Public perceptions of crime and victimisation can influence an individual's subjective well-being. R...
The costs of violent crime victimisation are often left to a judge, tribunal or jury to determine; l...