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statistics.gov.scotAccess to Scotland's Official Statistics

[this is a data cube dataset] A data cube dataset in folders : Scottish Government, Crime and Justice

Crime Survey

Selected results from the Scottish Crime & Justice Survey.

Spreadsheet view
Dimensions
Dimension
Value
Experiences Of Crime
  1. Perception Of General Crime Rate In The Local Area
  2. Victimisation
Measure Type
  1. Ratio
Reference Period
  1. 1992
  2. 1995
  3. 1999
  4. 2000
  5. 2002
  6. 2003
  7. 2005
  8. 2006
  9. 2008
  10. 2009
  11. 2010
Reference Area
(Types of area available in these data)
  1. Country
Download
Whole dataset *
*(These may be very large files and are recommended only for users needing to replicate the entire dataset locally for programmatic use.)
CSVN-Triples
About the Dataset
Contact
Publisher
Scottish Government
Creator
Scottish Government
In folders
License
Issued
29/07/2014
Modified
09/02/2016
Next update due
Not supplied
Description

These indicators are derived from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey.

The SCJS is a large-scale social survey which asks people about their experiences and perceptions of crime.

The survey is important because it provides a picture of crime in Scotland, including crimes that haven’t been reported to, or recorded by the police.

An important role of the SCJS is to provide an alternative and complementary measure of crime to the police recorded crime statistics, which provide statistics on crimes and offences recorded and cleared up by the police in Scotland.

Details
Confidentiality Policy
Not supplied
Quality Management
Not supplied
Accuracy and Reliability

SCJS estimates are based on a representative sample of the population of Scotland aged 16 or over living in private households. A sample, as used in the SCJS, is a small-scale representation of the population from which it is drawn.

Any sample survey may produce estimates that differ from the values that would have been obtained if the whole population had been interviewed. The magnitude of these differences is related to the size and variability of the estimate, and the design of the survey, including sample size.

It is however possible to calculate the range of values between which the population figures are estimated to lie; known as the confidence interval (also referred to as margin of error).

Confidence Intervals and further information are are presented in the SCJS reports and Technical Reports.

Coherence and Comparability

Crime and victimisation surveys have been carried out in Scotland since the early 1980s. The geographical coverage, sample size, method and fieldwork and reference periods have varied across previous crime surveys.

Past Scottish crime and victimisation surveys 1982, 1988: British Crime Survey (BCS) included coverage of central and southern Scotland only (c. 5,000 interviews).

1993: First independent Scottish Crime Survey (SCS) launched, based on BCS and covering the whole of Scotland (c. 5,000 interviews).

1996, 2000, 2003: Further sweeps of the SCS (c. 5,000 interviews).

2004, 2006: Scottish Crime and Victimisation Survey (SCVS) (c. 27,000 interviews in 2004, c. 5,000 interviews in 2006).

2008/09, 2009/10, 2010/11: Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS) (c. 16,000 interviews 2008/09 and 2009/10, c. 13,000 interviews in 2010/11).

The SCJS was launched in April 2008, and represented a major departure from the design, methodology and sample size of previous surveys. The main changes introduced with the SCJS were an increase in the sample size and a move to continuous fieldwork throughout the financial year using a rolling reference period for the victimisation module. The increase in sample size enhances the statistical reliability of the estimates produced by the survey.

The design of the 2012/13 SCJS remains broadly similar to the 2008/09 to 2010/11 survey designs, although the sample size and fequency both reduced from 2010/11 onwards.

Accessibility and Clarity

Information is presented in summary reports and background data across many survey questions is published by key demographics and sub-national geographies. Datasets are deposited on the UK Data Archive, and can be interrogated there using their NESSTAR analysis tool.

Relevance

These indicators are derived from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey. The SCJS is a large-scale social survey which asks people about their experiences and perceptions of crime. The survey is important because it provides a picture of crime in Scotland, including crimes that haven’t been reported to, or recorded by the police. An important role of the SCJS is to provide an alternative and complementary measure of crime to the police recorded crime statistics, which provide statistics on crimes and offences recorded and cleared up by the police in Scotland.

Timeliness and Punctuality

Reporting of each survey sweep follows detailed weighting and quality assurance processes.

Revisions
Not supplied
URI

This is a linked data resource: it has a permanent unique uri at which both humans and machines can find it on the Internet, and which can be used an identifier in queries on our SPARQL endpoint.

http://statistics.gov.scot/data/crime-survey
Dimensions Linked Data

A linked data-orientated view of dimensions and values

Dimension Locked Value
Experiences Of Crime
http://statistics.gov.scot/def/dimension/experiencesOfCrime
(not locked to a value)
Reference Area
http://purl.org/linked-data/sdmx/2009/dimension#refArea
(not locked to a value)
Reference Period
http://purl.org/linked-data/sdmx/2009/dimension#refPeriod
(not locked to a value)
Measure Type
http://purl.org/linked-data/cube#measureType
(not locked to a value)
Graphs

Linked Data is stored in graphs. We keep dataset contents (the data) separately from the metadata, to make it easier for you to find exactly what you need.

The data in this dataset are stored in the graph: http://statistics.gov.scot/graph/crime-survey

The data structure definition for this data cube dataset is stored in the same graph as the data: http://statistics.gov.scot/graph/crime-survey

All other metadata about this dataset are stored in the graph: http://statistics.gov.scot/graph/crime-survey/metadata

Linked Data Resources

A breakdown by type of the 25 resources in this dataset's data graph.

Resource type Number of resources
Collection 2
Component specification 7
Data structure definition 1
Observation 15
All metadata
In Graph http://statistics.gov.scot/graph/crime-survey/metadata
Accessibility and Clarity http://statistics.gov.scot/def/statistical-quality/accessibility-and-clarity
Information is presented in summary reports and background data across many survey questions is published by key demographics and sub-national geographies. Datasets are deposited on the UK Data Archive, and can be interrogated there using their NESSTAR analysis tool. xsd:string
Accuracy and Reliability http://statistics.gov.scot/def/statistical-quality/accuracy-and-reliability
SCJS estimates are based on a representative sample of the population of Scotland aged 16 or over living in private households. A sample, as used in the SCJS, is a small-scale representation of the population from which it is drawn. Any sample survey may produce estimates that differ from the values that would have been obtained if the whole population had been interviewed. The magnitude of these differences is related to the size and variability of the estimate, and the design of the survey, including sample size. It is however possible to calculate the range of values between which the population figures are estimated to lie; known as the confidence interval (also referred to as margin of error). Confidence Intervals and further information are are presented in the SCJS reports and Technical Reports. xsd:string
Comment rdfs:comment http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#comment
Selected results from the Scottish Crime & Justice Survey. xsd:string
Comparability and Coherence http://statistics.gov.scot/def/statistical-quality/comparability-and-coherence
Crime and victimisation surveys have been carried out in Scotland since the early 1980s. The geographical coverage, sample size, method and fieldwork and reference periods have varied across previous crime surveys. Past Scottish crime and victimisation surveys 1982, 1988: British Crime Survey (BCS) included coverage of central and southern Scotland only (c. 5,000 interviews). 1993: First independent Scottish Crime Survey (SCS) launched, based on BCS and covering the whole of Scotland (c. 5,000 interviews). 1996, 2000, 2003: Further sweeps of the SCS (c. 5,000 interviews). 2004, 2006: Scottish Crime and Victimisation Survey (SCVS) (c. 27,000 interviews in 2004, c. 5,000 interviews in 2006). 2008/09, 2009/10, 2010/11: Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS) (c. 16,000 interviews 2008/09 and 2009/10, c. 13,000 interviews in 2010/11). The SCJS was launched in April 2008, and represented a major departure from the design, methodology and sample size of previous surveys. The main changes introduced with the SCJS were an increase in the sample size and a move to continuous fieldwork throughout the financial year using a rolling reference period for the victimisation module. The increase in sample size enhances the statistical reliability of the estimates produced by the survey. The design of the 2012/13 SCJS remains broadly similar to the 2008/09 to 2010/11 survey designs, although the sample size and fequency both reduced from 2010/11 onwards. xsd:string
Contact email http://publishmydata.com/def/dataset#contactEmail
Creator dcterms:creator http://purl.org/dc/terms/creator
Scottish Government http://statistics.gov.scot/id/organisation/scottish-government
Date Issued dcterms:issued http://purl.org/dc/terms/issued
July 29, 2014 02:00 xsd:dateTime
Date Modified dcterms:modified http://purl.org/dc/terms/modified
February 09, 2016 15:19 xsd:dateTime
Description dcterms:description http://purl.org/dc/terms/description
These indicators are derived from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey. The SCJS is a large-scale social survey which asks people about their experiences and perceptions of crime. The survey is important because it provides a picture of crime in Scotland, including crimes that haven’t been reported to, or recorded by the police. An important role of the SCJS is to provide an alternative and complementary measure of crime to the police recorded crime statistics, which provide statistics on crimes and offences recorded and cleared up by the police in Scotland. xsd:string
Graph http://publishmydata.com/def/dataset#graph
Has a SPARQL endpoint at void:sparqlEndpoint http://rdfs.org/ns/void#sparqlEndpoint
In folder http://publishmydata.com/def/ontology/folder/inFolder
Scottish Government http://statistics.gov.scot/def/concept/folders/organisations/scottish-government
Crime and Justice http://statistics.gov.scot/def/concept/folders/themes/crime-and-justice
Label rdfs:label http://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label
Crime Survey xsd:string
License dcterms:license http://purl.org/dc/terms/license
Publisher dcterms:publisher http://purl.org/dc/terms/publisher
Scottish Government http://statistics.gov.scot/id/organisation/scottish-government
References dcterms:references http://purl.org/dc/terms/references
Relevance http://statistics.gov.scot/def/statistical-quality/relevance
These indicators are derived from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey. The SCJS is a large-scale social survey which asks people about their experiences and perceptions of crime. The survey is important because it provides a picture of crime in Scotland, including crimes that haven’t been reported to, or recorded by the police. An important role of the SCJS is to provide an alternative and complementary measure of crime to the police recorded crime statistics, which provide statistics on crimes and offences recorded and cleared up by the police in Scotland. xsd:string
Theme dcat:theme http://www.w3.org/ns/dcat#theme
Crime and Justice http://statistics.gov.scot/def/concept/folders/themes/crime-and-justice
Timeliness and Punctuality http://statistics.gov.scot/def/statistical-quality/timeliness-and-punctuality
Reporting of each survey sweep follows detailed weighting and quality assurance processes. xsd:string
Title dcterms:title http://purl.org/dc/terms/title
Crime Survey xsd:string
Type rdf:type http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#type
Data set http://purl.org/linked-data/cube#DataSet
Dataset http://publishmydata.com/def/dataset#Dataset
dataset http://rdfs.org/ns/void#Dataset
Dataset http://www.w3.org/ns/dcat#Dataset
In Graph http://statistics.gov.scot/graph/crime-survey
Structure qb:structure http://purl.org/linked-data/cube#structure
http://statistics.gov.scot/data/structure/crime-survey http://statistics.gov.scot/data/structure/crime-survey
Machine-readable formats

In addition to this bookmarkable html page, this dataset metadata is also available for our robot customers in the following machine-readable formats. Please refer to the API documentation for more details.

dataset metadata JSON RDF/XML Turtle N-Triples Atom