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Australian crime : facts and figures 2006
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Australian crime : facts and figures 2006
Australian crime : facts and figures 2006
- ISBN 978 1 921185 30 4 ; ISSN 1832-228X
- Canberra: Australian Institute of Criminology, 2007
Statistics used in Australian crime: facts & figures come from a
variety of sources. There are two types of data collections, administrative and
survey, and both types of information are needed to help inform our
understanding of the level and effects of crime in the community. The sources used to compile this issue are listed in the
references.
Administrative collections - Criminal justice agencies keep records of
their workflow at different stages. For example, police keep incident records,
courts record the details of cases and their disposition, and corrections
agencies have details of the offenders in their charge. Most basic information
comes from these administrative collections, which cover the whole population
that comes into contact with the criminal justice system, and remain relatively
stable in terms of collections and production over time.
There are limitations to these data, however, including comparability across
agencies and jurisdictions. Most of the data have been collated at a national
level only relatively recently - recorded crime from police records since 1996,
prisoners since 1983, and all criminal courts since 2001. There are as yet no
national data on offenders. The collections are not all based on the same unit
of measurement; for example, police record details about offences, courts record
cases, and corrections agencies record information about individual prisoners.
Although there has been much improvement, definitions and collecting methods are
not always uniform across jurisdictions, and recording quality may be an issue.
It can take time to reach agreement at a national level on key issues including
definitions of new and emerging offences. More detailed information about crime
and justice is often available at a jurisdictional level, even when it is not
possible to produce national statistics.
Not all crimes are reported to police - this is believed to vary from a low of
20 percent for sexual assaults to a high of 95 percent for motor vehicle thefts.
This is one of the main reasons that the other main type of data collection,
surveys, is undertaken.
Surveys - Crime victimisation surveys have the advantage of asking the
same questions in the same way across the whole of the sample population. These
answers are then recorded in a similarly uniform way so that the information
they provide is reliable and comparable.
Crime victimisation surveys are believed to provide a more accurate picture of
actual crime rates in society. Surveys are expensive, however, so they tend to
be either one-off or infrequent. It is not always valid to extrapolate from a
sample to the whole population, however, and all sample surveys have a certain
amount of error. Surveys used in this publication this year include the Personal
safety survey and the Crime and safety survey, both conducted by the Australian
Bureau of Statistics.
Notes on using these statistics
It should be noted that police information on victims and offenders has not been
tested in court. A murder as recorded by police might later be reclassified as
manslaughter; there may be insufficient evidence to convict an alleged offender
in any criminal case.
Where crime rates appear to fluctuate markedly, this may be due to small numbers
involved. For example, where one jurisdiction records four homicides in a year,
one more or less the next year will appear to be a 25 percent change.
Because of rounding, some percentages may not sum to 100.
Rates are determined against two different types of base population - either the
total population or the relevant population. The property crime victimisation
rate, for example, divides the total population by the number of victims of
property crime. In this publication data are presented as per 100,000 population
where the total population is used. Rates per relevant population refer to the
number of persons as a proportion of a specified population group (for example,
juveniles, males or females, or Indigenous persons).