During the roughly fifty years following the Second World War, the best evidence we have from recorded crimes and victimisation surveys suggests that the level and rate of crime rose in almost all countries for which data are available. The increases seemed to be inexorable. Then, first in the United States and after that in many other countries and against expectations crime began to fall and to do so precipitously. Moreover the falls were more than temporary blips: they have been sustained. The changes in direction in crime trajectories took almost all by surprise. They had not been expected by policy-makers, journalists, the general public or, for that matter, criminologists. It seemed to us that the international crime drop poses perhap...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...
After decades of continuously increasing crime rates, Canada and the United States have now experien...
Western industrialised countries experienced major reductions in crime for a decade from the early t...
During the roughly fifty years following the Second World War, the best evidence we have from record...
Drawing on studies from major European countries and Australia, this exciting new collection from a ...
The ‘crime drop’ is the most important criminological phenomenon of modern times. In North America, ...
Crime rates have moved in parallel in Western societies since the late Middle Ages. Homicide rates d...
The “crime drop” is the most important criminological phenomenon of modern times. In North America, ...
This paper examines aggregate crime trends and variation around them from 1988 to 2004 for 26 countr...
The explanations of the remarkable decrease in crime that has been reported over the last two decade...
The Myth of the ‘Crime Decline’ seeks to critically interrogate the supposed statistical decline of ...
A recent publication (Ignatans and Pease, 2015) sought to examine the changed distribution of crime ...
Combining data from police statistics and crime victim surveys, this article analyses the evolution ...
According to the Crime Survey for England and Wales, violence fell dramatically between 1995 and 201...
Major crime drops were experienced in the United States and most other industrialised countries for ...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...
After decades of continuously increasing crime rates, Canada and the United States have now experien...
Western industrialised countries experienced major reductions in crime for a decade from the early t...
During the roughly fifty years following the Second World War, the best evidence we have from record...
Drawing on studies from major European countries and Australia, this exciting new collection from a ...
The ‘crime drop’ is the most important criminological phenomenon of modern times. In North America, ...
Crime rates have moved in parallel in Western societies since the late Middle Ages. Homicide rates d...
The “crime drop” is the most important criminological phenomenon of modern times. In North America, ...
This paper examines aggregate crime trends and variation around them from 1988 to 2004 for 26 countr...
The explanations of the remarkable decrease in crime that has been reported over the last two decade...
The Myth of the ‘Crime Decline’ seeks to critically interrogate the supposed statistical decline of ...
A recent publication (Ignatans and Pease, 2015) sought to examine the changed distribution of crime ...
Combining data from police statistics and crime victim surveys, this article analyses the evolution ...
According to the Crime Survey for England and Wales, violence fell dramatically between 1995 and 201...
Major crime drops were experienced in the United States and most other industrialised countries for ...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...
After decades of continuously increasing crime rates, Canada and the United States have now experien...
Western industrialised countries experienced major reductions in crime for a decade from the early t...