Developing a Crime Harm Index for Western Australia: the WACHI

P. House, P. Neyroud
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引用次数: 18

Abstract

Research QuestionCan a reliable measure of precise harm levels for the 100 most harmful and frequently occurring offences be developed in Western Australia (WA) based on analysis of actual court penalties for first-time offenders?DataCriminal and traffic court sentences in 2.2 million records over 6.5 years were analysed to extract the number of days of imprisonment actually imposed in sentencing decisions for approximately 52,000 first-time offenders (see House 2017).MethodsSentences for all first offenders in a sample of the 102 most common offence categories were analysed to compute for the median number of days of imprisonment to which each first offender was sentenced in each of the categories. Monetary penalties and conditional community sentences were converted to equivalent ‘prison days’ and added to the computation of the median of days of imprisonment per offence category. The number of reported offences in WA in the study period for each of the 102 categories was then multiplied by the median prison days sentenced per category. The sum of the products of median prison days times offence count was then tallied across all offence categories to form a weighted index of crime harm, which we define as the Western Australian Crime Harm Index (WACHI). Applying a minimum requirement of at least five separate court cases for each crime category, a total of 88 offence categories survived the reliability threshold for inclusion in the index.FindingsThe 88 offence categories in the WACHI contain both high-harm and high-volume offences, permitting 95% of all offences reported for over 5 years to be assessed for WACHI scores. The counts for these offences moved in different directions from the WACHI total in two of the four year-to-year comparisons. Changes in WACHI were shown to have been highly sensitive to increased reporting of historical sex crimes, isolated in one district each of both Metropolitan Perth and one Regional centre.ConclusionsCarefully implemented use of the West Australian CHI could improve both public safety and policing by adding precision to resource allocation decisions, assessments of priorities and evaluations of policing initiatives. The WACHI would be even more reflective of the changing level of harm to victims if all crime trends were to be based on crimes that occurred in the year under analysis, with separate reporting of crimes that happened many years ago. With that key adjustment, police professionals, department of justice officials, citizens and local governments can use a WACHI to make better decisions about how to prioritise policing in a wide range of contexts.
制定西澳大利亚州的犯罪危害指数:WACHI
研究问题:在西澳大利亚州(WA),能否根据对初犯的实际法庭处罚的分析,制定出一套可靠的措施,准确衡量100种最有害和最频繁发生的罪行的危害程度?数据刑事和交通法庭在6.5年里对220万份记录进行了分析,以提取出大约5.2万名初犯者在判决决定中实际判处的监禁天数(见House 2017)。方法分析了102种最常见犯罪类别中所有初犯的刑期,以计算每个初犯在每种类别中被判处的监禁天数的中位数。罚金和有条件的社区监禁被转换成同等的“监禁日数”,并加在计算每一罪行类别的监禁日数中位数时。在研究期间,西澳州102个类别中每一个类别的报告犯罪数量乘以每个类别的中位数监禁天数。然后,将所有犯罪类别的中位数监禁天数与犯罪次数的乘积相加,形成一个加权的犯罪危害指数,我们将其定义为西澳大利亚犯罪危害指数(WACHI)。按照每个罪行类别至少有五个单独的法庭案件的最低要求,共有88个罪行类别没有达到纳入指数的可靠性门槛。调查结果WACHI中的88个犯罪类别包含高伤害和高数量的犯罪,允许95%的报告超过5年的犯罪被评估为WACHI分数。在四年的同比比较中,有两年这些罪行的数量与WACHI总数的变化方向不同。WACHI的变化显示出对历史性犯罪报告的增加高度敏感,分别在珀斯大都会和一个区域中心的一个地区。结论仔细实施使用西澳大利亚州CHI可以通过增加资源分配决策、优先级评估和警务举措评估的准确性来改善公共安全和警务。如果所有的犯罪趋势都以被分析年份发生的犯罪为基础,而单独报告多年前发生的犯罪,那么WACHI将更能反映对受害者伤害程度的变化。通过这一关键调整,警察专业人员、司法部官员、公民和地方政府可以利用WACHI来更好地决定如何在各种情况下优先考虑警务。
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