<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>This research focused on crime and its relation to risk of victimisation and the suggestion that high-risk groups, in particular, young men, report lower fear than low-risk groups, in particular, older women.<br> The notion of anxiety as a mediating influence in the relationship between risk of victimisation and fear of crime was examined. Through a set of face-to-face interviews, the research found that the effect of risk figured prominently in interviewee's accounts of their fear of crime and their previous victimisation. They not only positioned themselves as more or less at risk but more actively were recurrently engaged in more or less 'risky' practices. The ...
Previous research has established that fear of crime victimization is a result of many factors inclu...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This research focused on crim...
In this article, the authors use survey data to explore relationships between gender, fear of crime ...
Prior research has identified gender as a significant predictor of crime fear. Specifically, women a...
Prior research has identified gender as a significant predictor of crime fear. Specifically, women a...
Studies have been directed at explaining the 'gender gap ' in the fear of crime: why do wo...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
Fear of crime (FOC) research has repeatedly found a ‘paradox of fear’, in which females are found to...
Fear of crime (FoC) is becoming increasingly prevalent within research, despite the decrease in crim...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
The risk-fear paradox, whereby people who experience the least criminal victimisation report the gre...
In the past 30 years, the fear of crime has come to be understood as a problem that can be independe...
Previous research has established that fear of crime victimization is a result of many factors inclu...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...
Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.This research focused on crim...
In this article, the authors use survey data to explore relationships between gender, fear of crime ...
Prior research has identified gender as a significant predictor of crime fear. Specifically, women a...
Prior research has identified gender as a significant predictor of crime fear. Specifically, women a...
Studies have been directed at explaining the 'gender gap ' in the fear of crime: why do wo...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
Fear of crime (FOC) research has repeatedly found a ‘paradox of fear’, in which females are found to...
Fear of crime (FoC) is becoming increasingly prevalent within research, despite the decrease in crim...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
In this paper multivariate analyses are used to test two hypotheses specific to the assumption that ...
The risk-fear paradox, whereby people who experience the least criminal victimisation report the gre...
In the past 30 years, the fear of crime has come to be understood as a problem that can be independe...
Previous research has established that fear of crime victimization is a result of many factors inclu...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...
Women generally feel more fearful than men. We study this so-called fear-gender gap, by contributing...