Knowledge of the Unknown

Sophie Ledebur
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Undetected and unreported crime are among the most pressing challenges of crime statistics. Since the late 1960s and early 1970s, victim surveys and self-report surveys have helped to paint a clearer picture of the social reality of crime, and in modern criminology such tools are now state of the art. Yet despite the current boom in survey-based methods, the history of this quest to define the “reality of crime” remains largely obscure. Its roots extend much further back to an age well before the “dark figure” of crime became, at least in part, a measurable entity. This paper explores the historical context behind an emerging awareness of undiscovered crime at the turn to the 19th century. The knowledge that knowledge was deficient emerged out of practices of criminal investigation. It is considered here in the light of a perception in German territories on the threshold to a modern administration that itinerant thieves and vagabonds posed a very real danger. The paper examines methods adopted to probe uncharted realms, thereby stabilizing the veracity of this “knowledge of the unknown”.
未知的知识
未被发现和未报告的犯罪是犯罪统计中最紧迫的挑战之一。自20世纪60年代末和70年代初以来,受害者调查和自我报告调查有助于更清楚地描绘犯罪的社会现实,在现代犯罪学中,这些工具现在是最先进的。然而,尽管目前基于调查的方法蓬勃发展,这种探索定义“犯罪现实”的历史在很大程度上仍然模糊不清。它的根源可以追溯到一个时代,在犯罪的“黑影”成为一个可衡量的实体之前,至少在某种程度上是这样。这篇论文探讨了19世纪初人们对未被发现的犯罪意识的兴起背后的历史背景。知识不足的认识是在刑事侦查实践中产生的。这里考虑的是在德国领土上的一种观念,即在现代行政的门槛上,流动的小偷和流浪汉构成了非常现实的危险。本文探讨了探索未知领域所采用的方法,从而稳定了这种“未知知识”的准确性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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