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The Lived Experience of Crime


Article # : 16276 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 3 / 1989  2,880 Words
Author : Robert L. Bonn
Robert L. Bonn is professor in the Sociology Department at John Jay college of Criminal Justice (CUNY). He has published Criminology (1984) and articles in the field, including "The Case against Using Biological Indicators in Judicial Decision Making" (coauthored with Alexander B. Smith), Criminal Justice Ethics 7, no. 1 (Winter/Spring 1988).

       Crime in America is a social problem that cries out for explanation and understanding. Of particular concern are U.S. rates of violent crime (especially homicide, rape, aggravated assault, and robbery), which remain dramatically higher than in other industrialized Western nations, despite our considerable efforts to control them. The 1980s have seen record levels in numbers of arrests, prosecutions, convictions and, as a result, in numbers of people sentenced to prison, jail, or probation. While rates of violent crime declined moderately in the first half of the 1980s, they are now beginning to rise again.
       
        Criminology
       
        As social scientists seeking to understand the crime problem, many criminologists rely heavily on so-called background studies of crime. These studies utilize official data, self-reports, or victim surveys to examine the social, psychological, economic, or other characteristics of offenders. Aided by the use of computers, criminological journals are full of articles demonstrating that background variables such as age, race, class, place, and sex are correlated to crime. Indeed, it is worth noting that rates of violent crime are often found to be higher for younger than for older people, for blacks than for whites, for lower- than for upper or middle-class people, for urban than for suburban or rural dwellers, and for males than for females. Moreover, when these variables fall together, they interact so as to produce extremely high crime rates for young, black, lower-class, urban males.
       
        Striking though the correlations between background variables and crime might be, they do not provide a theory that explains the dynamics of ... (2000 of 17379 Characters)
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