2024-03-28T11:35:42Z
https://easy.dans.knaw.nl/oai/
oai:easy.dans.knaw.nl:easy-dataset:44578
2023-06-07T09:27:29Z
driver
D40000:D42000
D40000:D41000
easy-collection:7
10.17026/dans-xnj-rmb2
Drs. J.N. van Kesteren
Tilburg University - International Victimology Institute
International Crime Victims Surveys - ICVS - 1989, 1992, 1996, 2000, 2005
European Survey on Crime and Safety - EU ICS 2005
Data Archiving and Networked Services (DANS)
2010
Social sciences
Political and administrative
sciences
Science of law
vandalism
robbery
pickpocketing
thefts
sexual harassement
violence
police behaviour
punishment
detention
victimization
crime
safety
Temporal coverage: 1989
Temporal coverage: 1992
Temporal coverage: 1996
Temporal coverage: 2000
Temporal coverage: 2005
Marisca Brouwer - WODC - Ministerie van Justitie
Sami Nevala
1989
1992
1996
2000
2005
2010-03-31
en
Dataset
urn:nbn:nl:ui:13-wx0-h0o
easy-dataset:44578
twips.dans.knaw.nl-3152626867711635737-1270026934841
SPSS
PDF
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
License: http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0
Integrated Database from the International Crime Victims Survey - ICVS 1989-2005, and the European Survey on Crime and Safety - EU ICS 2005. The ICVS is a programme of standardised sample surveys to look at householders’ experience with crime, policing, crime prevention and feelings of unsafety in a large number of countries.
The ICVS became operational in 1989. The main object was to seek advancement in international comparative criminological research, beyond the constraints of officially recorded crime data. The next sweeps of the ICVS surveys took place in 1992, 1996 and 2000. With its fifth sweep in 2005 the initiative has developed into a truly unique global project. Over a time span of fifteen years more than 300,000 people were interviewed about their experiences with victimisation and related subjects in 78 different countries. The ICVS is the most comprehensive instrument developed yet to monitor and study volume crimes, perception of crime and attitudes towards the criminal justice system in a comparative, international perspective. The data are from surveys amongst the general public and therefore not influenced by political or ideological agendas of governments of individual countries. Standardisation of questionnaires used and other aspects of data collection assure that data can, within confidence margins, be reliably compared across countries.
The ICVS-2 (2010) is the responsibility of the Dutch WODC (Ministry of Justice) and the British Home Office. The 2010 data (a pilot held in 6 countries) will probably become available in 2012.
International