Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Foreword and Acknowledgments
- The Criminal Career
- 1 The Career Concept in Criminological Research
- I Objectives, Methodology, and Sample
- II The Criminal Career
- 7 Prevalence
- 8 Individual Crime Frequencies
- 9 Criminal Onset
- 10 Recidivism and Duration of the Criminal Career
- 11 Desistance from the Criminal Career
- 12 Specialization or Versatility in the Types of Offenses
- 13 Escalation in the Seriousness of Crime
- III Sanctions and Deterrence
- IV Discussion of Results
- References
- Index
8 - Individual Crime Frequencies
from II - The Criminal Career
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- List of Figures
- Foreword and Acknowledgments
- The Criminal Career
- 1 The Career Concept in Criminological Research
- I Objectives, Methodology, and Sample
- II The Criminal Career
- 7 Prevalence
- 8 Individual Crime Frequencies
- 9 Criminal Onset
- 10 Recidivism and Duration of the Criminal Career
- 11 Desistance from the Criminal Career
- 12 Specialization or Versatility in the Types of Offenses
- 13 Escalation in the Seriousness of Crime
- III Sanctions and Deterrence
- IV Discussion of Results
- References
- Index
Summary
the individual crime frequency indicates the number of criminal offenses an individual offender commits during a certain period, typically one year. In Anglo-Saxon literature, the annual individual crime frequency is often denominated by the Greek letter lambda.
Measurement of the annual individual crime frequency is a relatively recent development. Interest was sparked by a focus in American crime policy in the mid-1970s on the incapacitating effect of imprisonment. Confinement has an obvious preventive effect by physically inhibiting the confined from committing crimes. However, it was not until the first Philadelphia cohort study showed the uneven distribution of crime among offenders (Wolfgang, Figlio, and Sellin, 1972) that interest grew in using more goal-oriented confinement strategies (that is, to maximize the incapacitation effect).
To optimize this effect, it is necessary to predict individual crime frequencies, and this requires an understanding of the conditions responsible for variations in those frequencies. This was exactly the reason for the initiation of research in this area. The first study of individual crime frequencies is from 1978, a pilot study (Petersilia, Greenwood, and Lavin, 1978) for a subsequent (and better known) Rand Corporation study of self-reported criminality among inmates. One year later, Alfred Blumstein and Jacqueline Cohen published an article on individual crime frequencies which has achieved the status of pioneer work within the area of criminal careers research (Blumstein and Cohen, 1979).
Measuring Individual Crime Frequencies
Measurement of individual crime frequencies is based on offenders who are criminally active during a specific period in question.
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- The Criminal CareerThe Danish Longitudinal Study, pp. 88 - 106Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002