The crime data handbook / edited by Laura Huey, David Buil-Gil.
Publisher: Bristol : Bristol University Press, 2024Description: 324 pages : illustrations (black and white) 24 cmISBN:- 9781529232042 (pbk.) :
- 364.042/CRI
Item type | Current library | Collection | Class number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item reservations | |
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Basic loan | Main Library Main Collection: 000-999 | Main Collection | 364.042/CRI (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 365253 |
Introduction - Laura Huey and David Buil-Gil -- PART 1 - CRIME DATA SOURCES -- Chapter 1 Forewarned Is Forearmed: The Hidden Curriculum of Working With Police Crime Data - Sophie Curtis-Ham, Lisa Tompson and Sarah Czarnomski -- Chapter 2 Local Safety and Victimization Surveys as a Data Source for Evidence-Based Prevention Policies - Marta Murri Sangens, Cristina Sobrino Garcs and Jose Maria Lpez-Riba -- Chapter 3 National Crime Surveys in the 21st Century - Mark Mills -- Chapter 4 Self-Reported Data - Raquel Bartolom Gutierrez, Esther Fernndez-Molina and Rosemary Barberet -- Chapter 5 Using Synthetic Crime Data to Understand Patterns of Police Undercounting at the Local Level - Ian Brunton-Smith, David Buil-Gil, Jose Pina-Snchez, Alexandru Cernat and Angelo Moretti -- Chapter 6 Health Data: Complementing Police Data to Know How Violent Places Are and Whether Interventions Are Effective - Alex Sutherland and Adrian Boyle -- Chapter 7 Social Media Data as a Gateway to Victims' Experiences - Jess C. Aguerri and Fernando Mir-Llinares -- PART 2 - USING CRIME AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE DATA -- Chapter 8 Police Involvement in Mental Health Call-Outs - Stuart D.M. Thomas -- Chapter 9 Exploring Unsolved Homicides in Great Britain Through the FOIA: Implications for Practitioner Approaches to Investigations - Kirsty Bennett -- Chapter 10 Obscured by Its Omnipresence? Conceptual and Practical Issues Around Measuring Alcohol-Related Crime in England and Wales - Carly Lightowlers, Lucy Bryant and Olivia Horsefield -- Chapter 11 Connecting the Corrupt: Data Sources to Study Networks of Serious Financial Crime in the United Kingdom - Toms Divik and Nicholas Lord -- Chapter 12 the Limits of Deadly Force Databases for Studying Lethal Force by Police - Bryce Jenkins, Tori Semple and Craig Bennell -- PART 3 - CRIME DATA IN THEORY, POLICY AND PRACTICE -- Chapter 13 Measuring Attitudes From General Purpose Surveys: A Pragmatic Approach for Criminology - Jack Cunliffe -- Chapter 14 on the Use of Inferential Statistics on Administrative Police Data - Tim Verlaan and Samuel Langton -- Chapter 15 Bad Outcomes, Good Intentions: Approaching the Potential Misuse of Crime Data by Policy Makers - Francisco J. Castro-Toledo and Ana B. Gmez-Bellvs -- Chapter 16 the Collection and Understanding of Administrative Data in UK Police Forces - Scott Keay and Jude Towers -- PART 4 - COMPARING, CONTRASTING AND COMBINING CRIME DATA -- Chapter 17 Using Financial Transaction Data to Analyze, Detect and Disrupt Technologically Facilitated Crime - Timothy I.C. Cubitt -- Chapter 18 A Framework for Measuring the Quality of Police Recorded Cybercrime Data, Illustrated Through a UK/USA Comparison - Sara Correia-Hopkins -- Chapter 19 The Dark Figure of Prison Violence in Uruguay: An Exploratory Mixed-Method Study - Nicols Trajtenberg and Olga Snchez De Ribera -- Chapter 20 Measuring Intimate Partner Violence Using Different Data Sources: Reflections on a Global Shadow Pandemic - Anthony Morgan and Hayley Boxall -- Chapter 21 Surveying Domestic Abuse Victims: The Inimical Lack of Common Ground - Leticia Couto