Knoema.com - Crime http://knoema.fr 2023-01-17T16:25:29Z /favicon.png Knoema est votre Route du savoir personnelle The Gun Death Rate in the US Nears Three-Decade High //knoema.fr/intscsc/the-gun-death-rate-in-the-us-nears-three-decade-high 2023-01-17T16:25:29Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
The Gun Death Rate in the US Nears Three-Decade High

(January 2023) In January the Gun Violence Archive released final figures on gun-related violence in 2022. Here are key takeaways.After in 2021 more Americans died of gun-related injuries than in any other year on record, in 2022  the Gun Violence Archive registered slightly fewer gun death. Overall, gun death excluding suicides declined to 20,181 incidents, which is 827 deaths less compared to 2021.A record number of America's kids were injured or killed by gunfire in 2022. According to the Gun Violence Archive more than 6,000 children and teens were injured or killed in shootings. That's the most in a single year since the database began tracking nine years ago.The number of mass shootings (4 or more shot), declined slightly from 690 in 2021 to 648 in 2022, but the number of mass murders (4 or more people killed) increased by 30%, from 28 in 2021 to 36 in 2022.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crime Incidents in Boston //knoema.fr/zbwppe/crime-incidents-in-boston 2022-04-18T17:55:34Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crime Incidents in Boston

(18 April 2022) Heading to or leaving in Boston, take a look at high frequency data on crime incidents from the Boston Police Department (BPD).  According to the BPD assault records, for 2020-2022 the safest time for outdoor activities is at 5-6 a.m. And six months through November-April are much safer compared to May-October. Personal property stored in buildings is in safe between 1 and 7 a.m. And it is unlikely that car will be stollen between 2 and 6 a.m.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Digital Privacy Erased for a Couple of Bucks //knoema.fr/aqfkvtc/digital-privacy-erased-for-a-couple-of-bucks 2021-08-24T07:31:21Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Digital Privacy Erased for a Couple of Bucks

(19 June 2020) With a digitized economy, follows digitized crime. According to recent research by PrivacyAffairs, personal data such as credit card details, online banking logins, and social media credentials is available on the dark web at worryingly low prices. For example, online banking logins cost an average of $35. Full credit card details, including associated data, cost $12-20. And a full range of documents and account details allowing identity theft can be obtained for $1,500.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
United States: Mass Shootings and Homicide Statistics //knoema.fr/rzgeudd/united-states-mass-shootings-and-homicide-statistics 2021-04-28T13:55:41Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
United States: Mass Shootings and Homicide Statistics

(13 April 2021) US President Joe Biden called on Congress to ban the sale of assault weapons in the country during his speech at the White House on the March 22 shooting in Colorado, which killed 10 people. In 2020, the number of mass shootings in the US, as well as the number of victims (both killed and injured), hit a seven-year high, according to the Gun Violence Archive. Nonetheless, in a country with a disproportionate share of the world's guns—the US accounts for 5% of the world's population and 45% of privately owned firearms— advocates of gun rights leverage other crime statistics to moderate calls for stricter gun laws:The assault rate in the United States is lower than in some other developed countries and actually decreased in 2018 (the latest available year for this kind of data) according to the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime.Likewise, the US homicide rate decreased in 2018, though it remains high compared to other developed nations.Most crimes are committed by illegally obtained guns that are by definition beyond the reach of the legal firearm retail industry that's targeted by some policy proposals. With deep philosophical differences between Democrats and Republicans about how to tackle the gun violence issue, it seems unlikely that tighter gun safety legislation proposed by Biden — including a ban on assault weapons and closing background check loopholes — will be approved by Congress any time soon.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Mass Shootings in the United States //knoema.fr/jdcgxpe/mass-shootings-in-the-united-states 2021-04-07T05:48:10Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Mass Shootings in the United States

The conversation in the United States has returned to an all too familiar topic, “the latest mass shooting,” a reference to the attack by Stephen Paddock on an outdoor music venue in Las Vegas, Nevada, on the evening of 1 October 2018. Paddock murdered 59 people and injured another 241 people. To date in 2018, the US has experienced 426 mass shootings, in which 362 people have been killed and another 1,289 injured.Data also shows that during the last five years, the deadliest states—California, Florida, Texas, and Illinois—also have the largest distribution of handguns. Regulators remain politically incapacitated by out-of-context pleas for protection of the 2nd amendment right to bear arms, heavy financial support and sway of the National Rifle Association (NRA), and a voters who remain concerned that regulations of guns will infringe on lawful use of guns.In the days surrounding the shooting in Las Vegas, publicity suggested the NRA and US government understood action was needed. The NRA and US legislators turned to discussions about prohibitions on possession and sale of the equipment used by Paddock to automatize his weapons while Congress also suspending deliberation about the gun silencers.Yet, the Administration also rolled back legislation requiring the US Social Security administration to report to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System the names of people with documented mental disorders. Does regulation work? Globally, the answer is yes. In the US, the answer should also be yes, at least if you look at the most recent data after former President Barack Obama announced in one of his first weekly addresses of 2016 new measures to increase background checks on gun buyers. The number of mass shootings decreased from 385 to 276 and the number of firearms permits was also slashed, though one could argue whether someone with an intent to kill would necessarily be deterred by a permitting process. Undoubtedly, regulations aside, the statistics in the US remain alarming.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
United States: Fewer Crimes, Not Homicides, in the Year of COVID-19 //knoema.fr/rlehfbb/united-states-fewer-crimes-not-homicides-in-the-year-of-covid-19 2021-04-06T17:06:11Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
United States: Fewer Crimes, Not Homicides, in the Year of COVID-19

Current data on US crime rates is difficult to come by. Most data from the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is only available through 2018, a few exceptions such as offense clearance statistics go through 2019, and for 2020, the year of COVID, you have to either reference preliminary figures published in September that cover January-July or bounce from metro area to metro area to find the statistics you're looking for. So, we did both! COVID-19's reach is well beyond health, hitting employment, education, and potentially even crime. According to preliminary data from the FBI, reported violent and property crimes for the first six months of 2020 have decreased compared to the first six months of 2019. Taking a more local approach, we found that while total crime also decreased in some metro areas as COVID took hold nationwide, the reduction was mainly due to fewer reported crimes such as larceny, burglary, robbery, and auto theft, the most common criminal offenses. In contrast, homicides, which typically constitute less than 1 percent of all offenses, have increased.In July, the city of Atlanta, Georgia, went into a state of emergency after weeks of escalating homicide figures: the total number of murders from January through July—when COVID-19 peaked in Georgia—was almost 60 percent higher than over the same period of the previous year. At the same time, the overall number of criminal offenses in Atlanta was around 20 percent less than the previous year.Similar pictures were observed in St. Louis, Missouri, and Denver, Colorado where the number of homicides were as much as 37 percent and 50 percent higher compared to 2019 during the COVID-19 peak period in July. In contrast, the overall crime level was mostly unchanged in St. Louis and about 12 percent higher YoY in Denver. You may wonder whether the increased number of homicides was connected with protests against COVID-19 lockdown measures that took place in April and May as well as Black Lives Matter protests that swept the country for the better part of May and June (and far longer in some locations). The data suggests otherwise given the relatively localized number of violent protests and the persistently rising homicide rates through August and September. Even in cities with prolonged protests, such as Portland, you can see below that crime rates in 2020 are below 2019 levels. That said, it is interesting to note that while the homicide rates have been on the increase, so too have background checks for firearms, with the year-on-year percent increase oscillating within the range of 20-40 percent from January through May to as high as 80 percent above 2019 rates in July 2020, according to the FBI.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Human Security //knoema.fr/hnbxclf/human-security 2021-01-25T08:49:49Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Human Security

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
India: Violent Crimes on the Decline //knoema.fr/yxmxgzf/india-violent-crimes-on-the-decline 2020-10-21T19:19:47Z Nematullah Khan knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1975840
India: Violent Crimes on the Decline

Over the last four years (2016-2019), the violent crime rate in India has decreased from to 33.7 to 31.2 per lakh* population, however, this improvement masks critical disparities by type of crime and among Indian states.In 2019, total crime in India decreased by 2.4 percent, supported by reduced rioting (-20%) and dacoity (banditry) and arson cases (-9%). Crime against infants, including infanticide and foeticide, are on the rise, increasing 30 percent and 7 percent, respectively, in 2019 over the previous year.Among Indian states, Assam had the highest violent crime rate in 2019 at 83.4 per lakh population. Kidnaping, grievous hurt, attempted murder, rioting, and rape accounted for more than 70 percent of violent crimes in India. * Lakh is a unit in the Indian numbering system equal to 100,000.

Nematullah Khan knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1975840
US Prison Costs Grossly Exceed Public Education Spending //knoema.fr/odgnikf/us-prison-costs-grossly-exceed-public-education-spending 2020-08-07T11:49:40Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
US Prison Costs Grossly Exceed Public Education Spending

The decrease in the national crime rate in the US during the past two decades was insufficient to offset the cost to US taxpayers to manage prisons because of the simultaneous increase in the rate of incarceration during the period. Between 1991 and 2013, the national crime rate fell from 1,311 to 689 offenses per 100,000 people. In absolute terms, 8.5 million fewer crimes were committed in 2013 compared to 1991. While the crime rate decreased, the number of state inmates grew by 200 percent nationwide, reaching a total incarcerated population of 1.6 million in 2008. Another 723,131 inmates were confined in local jails for a total adult inmate population of 2.3 million, or roughly 1 in 100 adults in the United States. These trends in US criminal justice have come at a cost to American taxpayers. State corrections budgets have nearly quadrupled in the past two decades. Despite this alarming figure, official correction budgets account for only a portion of the financial obligations a state incurs when it sentences an individual to prison. The Vera Institute of Justice estimates that the total taxpayer cost of prisons, including additional indirect costs that fall outside correction budgets, was $39 billion in 2010. This is $5.4 billion more than official $33.5 billion total spending of state correction departments. These indirect costs vary widely, according to the Vera Institute, from 1 percent of the total cost of prisons in Arizona to 34 percent in Connecticut. The relative modern day cost of incarceration in the US relative to public expenditures on elementary-secondary education strongly supports social policy planning that puts education first. Assuming that the total number of people imprisoned in the United States was 1.2 million in 2010, the average per-inmate cost was $31,286 and ranged from $14,603 in Kentucky to $60,076 in New York. In contrast, the US government spent $602 billion on the nearly 50 million elementary-secondary students in public schools in the US in 2010, or about $12,800 per student, according to the US Census Bureau. This is more than two times less than was spent on average per inmate.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Protests Sweep America in Response to Death of George Floyd //knoema.fr/zrmqjw/protests-sweep-america-in-response-to-death-of-george-floyd 2020-06-02T21:25:21Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Protests Sweep America in Response to Death of George Floyd

(Published - 1 June 2020. Data updated - June 2 2020)  We estimate that during the last six days, over 100,000 people across the United States took part in protests in response to the death on 25 May of George Floyd, a black man who was in the custody of law enforcement in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Compare that to the roughly 50,000 who have protested over the last 40 days to demand state officials ease COVID-19 lockdown restrictions, and you get an immediate sense for the inflamed conditions in the United States.   We could point to many possible answers as to "Why?" the nationwide response to this particular crime, at this particular time, but taking a note from the 1992 (Bill) Clinton presidential campaign, at least one factor leaps to mind: "It's the economy, stupid." COVID-19 has been particularly tough on hourly wage earners, among which African Americans are overrepresented. This exacerbation of income inequality during COVID-19 has emerged as well in distorted average earnings figures in the United States, reflecting a spike as low-wage earners are left out of the COVID-19 pandemic economy.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Homicide Rates in Europe //knoema.fr/pnjbtgc/homicide-rates-in-europe 2020-05-21T21:41:38Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Homicide Rates in Europe

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crimes recorded by the police: homicide in cities //knoema.fr/kuyspuc/crimes-recorded-by-the-police-homicide-in-cities 2019-12-26T20:19:43Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crimes recorded by the police: homicide in cities

Ankara is the top city by the number of homicides in cities for 2005-2007. As of 2007, the number of homicides in Ankara reached 192 which is lower than the previous value by 4 percent. The top 5 cities also includes London, Athina, Berlin, and Beograd. Ankara and London together had 33 percent of all homicides among cities from the list. At the end of the list are cities with zero number of homicides. These include Valetta, Geneve, Bern, and Vaduz.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
A System That Spends More per Inmate Than per Student //knoema.fr/ixcphcg/a-system-that-spends-more-per-inmate-than-per-student 2019-08-02T20:24:57Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
A System That Spends More per Inmate Than per Student

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Personal Safety in the U.S. //knoema.fr/hqaeyl/personal-safety-in-the-u-s 2019-04-24T07:13:30Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Personal Safety in the U.S.

According to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, District of Columbia has the highest homicide rate amongst the U.S. states (23.3 homicides per 100 000 inhabitants).  Among other most unsafe states are Louisiana (13.2), Mississippi (10.2), Alabama (9.8) and New Mexico (8.3). Most safely you can feel if you are white and you are in Minnesota or New Hampshir.

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Police Shootings in the United States //knoema.fr/ltziteg/police-shootings-in-the-united-states 2019-04-10T16:21:40Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Police Shootings in the United States

The shooting death of Philando Castile by police in Falcon Heights, Minnesota, on 7 July pushed the issue of the use of deadly force by police back into national headlines and ignited protests throughout the United States. Data collected by the Washington Post on US police shootings suggests that the use of deadly force is on the rise. So far this year 512 people have been shot and killed by police in the United States. This is a three-percent increase - or, 16 more deaths - than the same period of 2015 and roughly equal to the number of people that have been killed this year in mass shootings in the US. Additional highlights from the data, as feature in the visualizations, include the following:In 55 percent of 2016 cases, police officers were confronted by subjects armed with guns, a slight decrease from 57 percent last year. In 77 percent of these incidents, the subjects fired at police, prompting officers to fire in return to protect themselves or bystanders. Subjects fired on police in 95 percent of incidents in 2015.Other measures are similarly static. As in 2015, 27 percent of those killed so far in 2016 have been black, 51 percent white. Likewise, in 2015 and 2016, mental illness played a role in roughly one-quarter of the incidents. In addition, the share of killings of unarmed people has remained below 10 percent - 6.8 percent in 2016 and 9.4 percent in 2015.One statistic that has notably changed is the share of black women killed in police shootings. While men still represent 95 percent of fatalities, in cases involving female deaths, the share of black women has risen to 35 percent in 2016 from 24 percent in 2015. The Washington Post began collecting data on shooting deaths by US police in 2014 after the death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, which rented national attention to police accountability. The Post aims to provide a more comprehensive accounting of incidents in response to the incompleteness and unreliability of data compiled by the FBI and other federal government agencies. The Post’s dataset, however, is not definitive. While the Post database reports 990 people were fatally shot by police in 2015, similar research by the Guardian "The Counted" suggests the figure is as high as 1,146 people. Looking ahead, increasing use of cameras mounted to patrol cars and worn by police officers in the line of duty promises near-term changes in awareness and prosecution of incidents of abuse of power by police forces. So far this year, 65 police shootings have been recorded using police devices, almost as many incidents as were captured on police cameras in all of 2015. As more incidents have been captured on camera, there has been a corresponding increase in officers facing criminal charges. According to the Washington Post, seven officers have been criminally charged so far this year, with five of the seven cases involving video evidence. During 2015, 18 officers were criminally charged and 10 cases involved video footage.  Surveillance cameras in the vicinity of crime scenes and witness smartphone camera footage also are contributing to awareness and accountability during these incidents.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Car Theft And Burglary Statistics Worldwide //knoema.fr/iprbsp/car-theft-and-burglary-statistics-worldwide 2019-04-05T11:02:41Z Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
Car Theft And Burglary Statistics Worldwide

  Ratings show top 20 countries with a highest level of car theft and burglary rates.   Select a country to view data about crime statistics in a specific region.

Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
International Crime Statistics: Housebreaking //knoema.fr/lmvvzte/international-crime-statistics-housebreaking 2019-03-28T11:11:56Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Housebreaking

"Domestic burglary/Housebreaking" means burglary of a house, apartment or other dwelling place.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice.   Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Theft, Motor Vehicle, Rate per 100,000 population //knoema.fr/nieopod/theft-motor-vehicle-rate-per-100-000-population 2019-03-28T11:10:00Z Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
Theft, Motor Vehicle, Rate per 100,000 population

 EconomyCrimeDemographicsGDP, current prices USDHomicide RateTotal Population ForecastGDP, PPP current intern. $HomicidesPopulation Growth Rate ForecastGDP per capita, current prices USDPercentage of homicides by firearmPopulation Density ForecastGDP per capita, PPP current intern. $Number of homicides by firearmMedian Age of the Population ForecastForeign Direct InvestmentHomicide by firearm rate Total populationTotal External Debt, USDAssault, ratePopulation Growth RateShare of AgricultureKidnapping, ratePopulation DensityShare of ManufacturingRobbery, rateMedian Age of PopulationShare of ServicesRape, rateMortality rate, under-5Unemployment rateBurglary,rateMortality rate, neonatalConsumer Price IndexTheft, Private Cars, RateMortality rate, infantGoverment Debt, % of GDPTheft, Motor Vehicle, RateDeath rateCurrent Account Balance, USDBurglary/housebreaking ,RateLife expectancy at birthCurrent Account Balance, % of GDP Fertility RateEmployment in agriculture     EducationAgricultureEnergyEnrolment Ratio. Pre-primary EducationCrops Production. QuantityTotal Biofuels ProductionEnrolment Ratio. Primary EducationCrops Production. Area HarvestedPrimary Energy ConsumptionEnrolment Ratio. Secondary EducationCrops Production. YieldWind Electricity Net GenerationEnrolment Ratio. Tertiary EducationLive Stock Production. StocksSolar, Tide and Wave ElectricityPublic Expenditures on Education Live Stock Production. QuantityCrude Oil Proved ReservesLiteracy Rate. Adult (15+)Trade. Import QuantityProved Reserves of Natural GasSchool life expectancy. TertiaryTrade. Export quantityProduction of Crude OilOutbound Mobility Ratio (%). TertiaryFood Supply. Quantity (kg/capita/yr)Gross Natural Gas ProductionAcademic Ranking of World UniversitiesFood Supply. Energy (kcal/capita/day)Total Primary Coal Production  Total Electricity Net Generation  Total Recoverable Coal   HealthGovernancePovertyHealth Expenditure Per CapitaCountry Policy and Institutional AssessmentPoverty ratio at $1.25 a dayTotal Health ExpendituresTransformation IndexPoverty ratio at $2 a dayOut-of-pocket health expendituresBetter Life IndexPoverty ratio at national poverty linePrevalence of HIVGlobal Slavery IndexPoverty ratio at rural poverty lineDepth of the food deficitDemocracy IndexPoverty ratio at urban poverty linePrevalence of undernourishmentQuality of Government Institute StandardGINI indexGlobal Snakebits StatisticsThe Rule of Law IndexIncome share held by lowest 10%Immunization, DPTWorld Press Freedom Index, 2014Income share held by highest 10%   BusinessCorruptionEnvironmentGlobal Dynamism Index (GDI)Corruption Perception IndexEnvironmental Performance IndexIndex of Economic FreedomFreedom House Nations in TransitGlobal Green Economy IndexSurvey of Mining CompaniesGlobal Business Bribery Risk Index Enabling Trade Index  World Bank Doing Business     CompetitivenessTransportationProsperityGlobal manufacturing competitiveness indexLogistics Perfomance IndexLegatum Prosperity Index RankGlobal Competitiveness IndexTransportation Price IndexLegatum Prosperity Index Indicators   StatisticsFreedomPensionsOpen Data BarometerFreedom in the WorldGlobal AgeWatch IndexMap Data. Open Data Barometer     DemocracyFood SecurityResearch and DevelopmentGlobal Democracy RankingGlobal Hunger IndexGlobal Innovation Index   Human DevelopmentProperty RightsKnowledgeHuman Development ReportInternational Property Rights IndexKnowledge Economy Index   TelecommunicationOcean Exchange RatesNetworked Readiness IndexOcean Health IndexThe Economist Big Mac Index   Happiness  World Happiness Index     

Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
International Crime Statistics: Motor Vehicle Theft //knoema.fr/hrubnqb/international-crime-statistics-motor-vehicle-theft 2019-03-28T10:32:47Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Motor Vehicle Theft

“Motor Vehicle Theft” means the removal of a motor vehicle without the consent of the owner of the vehicle. “Motor vehicles” includes all land vehicles with engines that run on roads, including cars, motorcycles, buses, lorries, and construction and agricultural vehicles.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice.   Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Burglary, Rate per 100,000 Population //knoema.fr/zowzgje/burglary-rate-per-100-000-population 2019-03-28T09:18:46Z Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
Burglary, Rate per 100,000 Population

   EconomyCrimeDemographicsGDP, current prices USDHomicide RateTotal Population ForecastGDP, PPP current intern. $HomicidesPopulation Growth Rate ForecastGDP per capita, current prices USDPercentage of homicides by firearmPopulation Density ForecastGDP per capita, PPP current intern. $Number of homicides by firearmMedian Age of the Population ForecastForeign Direct InvestmentHomicide by firearm rate Total populationTotal External Debt, USDAssault, ratePopulation Growth RateShare of AgricultureKidnapping, ratePopulation DensityShare of ManufacturingRobbery, rateMedian Age of PopulationShare of ServicesRape, rateMortality rate, under-5Unemployment rateBurglary,rateMortality rate, neonatalConsumer Price IndexTheft, Private Cars, RateMortality rate, infantGoverment Debt, % of GDPTheft, Motor Vehicle, RateDeath rateCurrent Account Balance, USDBurglary/housebreaking ,RateLife expectancy at birthCurrent Account Balance, % of GDP Fertility RateEmployment in agriculture     EducationAgricultureEnergyEnrolment Ratio. Pre-primary EducationCrops Production. QuantityTotal Biofuels ProductionEnrolment Ratio. Primary EducationCrops Production. Area HarvestedPrimary Energy ConsumptionEnrolment Ratio. Secondary EducationCrops Production. YieldWind Electricity Net GenerationEnrolment Ratio. Tertiary EducationLive Stock Production. StocksSolar, Tide and Wave ElectricityPublic Expenditures on Education Live Stock Production. QuantityCrude Oil Proved ReservesLiteracy Rate. Adult (15+)Trade. Import QuantityProved Reserves of Natural GasSchool life expectancy. TertiaryTrade. Export quantityProduction of Crude OilOutbound Mobility Ratio (%). TertiaryFood Supply. Quantity (kg/capita/yr)Gross Natural Gas ProductionAcademic Ranking of World UniversitiesFood Supply. Energy (kcal/capita/day)Total Primary Coal Production  Total Electricity Net Generation  Total Recoverable Coal   HealthGovernancePovertyHealth Expenditure Per CapitaCountry Policy and Institutional AssessmentPoverty ratio at $1.25 a dayTotal Health ExpendituresTransformation IndexPoverty ratio at $2 a dayOut-of-pocket health expendituresBetter Life IndexPoverty ratio at national poverty linePrevalence of HIVGlobal Slavery IndexPoverty ratio at rural poverty lineDepth of the food deficitDemocracy IndexPoverty ratio at urban poverty linePrevalence of undernourishmentQuality of Government Institute StandardGINI indexGlobal Snakebits StatisticsThe Rule of Law IndexIncome share held by lowest 10%Immunization, DPTWorld Press Freedom Index, 2014Income share held by highest 10%   BusinessCorruptionEnvironmentGlobal Dynamism Index (GDI)Corruption Perception IndexEnvironmental Performance IndexIndex of Economic FreedomFreedom House Nations in TransitGlobal Green Economy IndexSurvey of Mining CompaniesGlobal Business Bribery Risk Index Enabling Trade Index  World Bank Doing Business     CompetitivenessTransportationProsperityGlobal manufacturing competitiveness indexLogistics Perfomance IndexLegatum Prosperity Index RankGlobal Competitiveness IndexTransportation Price IndexLegatum Prosperity Index Indicators   StatisticsFreedomPensionsOpen Data BarometerFreedom in the WorldGlobal AgeWatch IndexMap Data. Open Data Barometer     DemocracyFood SecurityResearch and DevelopmentGlobal Democracy RankingGlobal Hunger IndexGlobal Innovation Index   Human DevelopmentProperty RightsKnowledgeHuman Development ReportInternational Property Rights IndexKnowledge Economy Index   TelecommunicationOcean Exchange RatesNetworked Readiness IndexOcean Health IndexThe Economist Big Mac Index   Happiness  World Happiness Index       

Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
High-level Thematic Debate on Crime Prevention, Criminal Justice and the Post-2015 Agenda //knoema.fr/owsoajc/high-level-thematic-debate-on-crime-prevention-criminal-justice-and-the-post-2015-agenda 2019-03-28T09:02:54Z Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
High-level Thematic Debate on Crime Prevention, Criminal Justice and the Post-2015 Agenda

25 February 2015   The Office of the President of the UN General Assembly (UNGA) was organizing a high-level thematic debate on ‘Integrating Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice in the Post-2015 Development Agenda'. The debate aimed to discuss the linkages between crime prevention, criminal justice and sustainable development within the context of the post-2015 agenda. The debate considered how to address social and economic challenges and promote sustainable development through strengthening crime prevention and criminal justice systems, norms and standards while also addressed threats that undermine them, such as illicit trafficking and corruption. The debate included an opening session and two panel discussions, and resulted in a President's summary.   Event Holder: International Institute for Sustainable Development (Sustainable Development Policy and Practice)

Alina Buzanakova knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1293450
International Crime Statistics: Burglary //knoema.fr/jdsieme/international-crime-statistics-burglary 2019-03-25T13:53:27Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Burglary

“Burglary” means gaining unauthorised access to a part of a building/dwelling or other premises, including by use of force, with the intent to steal goods (breaking and entering). “Burglary” includes, where possible, theft from a house, appartment or other dwelling place, factory, shop or office, military establishment, or by use of false keys. It excludes theft from a car, container, vending machine, parking meter, and from a fenced meadow or compound.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC International Burglary, Car Theft and Housebreaking Statistics, 2015 Homicide    Burglary     Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Social networks and crime rate //knoema.fr/fhozqae/social-networks-and-crime-rate 2019-03-25T11:47:32Z Ivan Lapickii knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1051100
Social networks and crime rate

December, 2015   Today Facebook, Twitter, Google as well as the specific police technologies like PredPol or ShoySpotter help the police to more effectively identify crimes and, what is more important, to predict them before they happen. There is one basic principle behind crime prediction algorithms: future crime will appear in accordance with probability distribution received from huge historical databases. There are numerous disputes on ethics, privacy, and validity of outcome along with the evolution of new policing method, but the results are quite positive: so, homicide rate in the US (the United States is the leading country in applying new method) reduced by 6 percent in average from 2000 to 2011. Concerning burglary, it also decreased through the period at a glance, except housebreaking. Of course, there are a lot of other factors behind these changes, but new policing technologies seem to be a rather significant factor. Based on article "How Facebook could get you arrested": http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2013/mar/09/facebook-arrested-evgeny-morozov-extract   Crime Statistics: Murders with Firearms and Homicide Rate

Ivan Lapickii knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1051100
Public Order and Safety Spending Worldwide //knoema.fr/gqzvwxc/public-order-and-safety-spending-worldwide 2019-03-01T06:01:43Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Public Order and Safety Spending Worldwide

Personal safety, as a basic human need, is encapsulated globally in national legislation and international accords, all with the aim of maintaining public order and safety. While definitions of law and order may vary by country—and with it the tasks assigned to security forces—the source of funding is nearly universally taxpayers. Every taxpayer thereby has the right to know whether these public expenditures are effective. In today’s viz we explore the efficiency of public safety expenditures global by comparing expenditures with crime levels.A comparison of homicide rates and government expenditures on public order and safety shows very little dependence.But, expenditurse compared to burglary rates reveals a distinct negative dependence. For example, Denmark and Sweden have among the lowest expenditures on safety globally and among the highest burglary rates. Conversely, spending by the UAE and Bulgaria on public security is relatively high and their burglary rates relatively low. Other quick facts:As a share of GDP, Kiribati, the UAE, South Africa, Seychelles, and the Ukraine spend the most globally on public order and safety, ranging from 3 to 4.7 percent of GDP. Among advanced economies, the United States spends the most at 2.04 percent of GDP, or about $379 billion in 2016. Interestingly, the US government also spends more on prisons than on students on a per-capita basis.Myanmar, Luxembourg, Denmark, Singapore, and Norway report the lowest law enforcement expenditures in the world.Advanced European countries have the highest burglary rates globally: Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden, Belgium are all in the top 5.  For information about police numbers and effectiveness globally, click here.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Incidence of Terrorism Across the World //knoema.fr/zxlxdxb/incidence-of-terrorism-across-the-world 2018-10-25T12:09:06Z Nematullah Khan knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1975840
Incidence of Terrorism Across the World

Nematullah Khan knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1975840
UK Crime Trends Not so Clear Cut //knoema.fr/jmnedjb/uk-crime-trends-not-so-clear-cut 2018-10-24T12:34:24Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
UK Crime Trends Not so Clear Cut

A recent tweet by US President Donald Trump referred to the contribution of terrorism to increasing crime in the UK as a red flag for the US, triggering an official response from the UK government and public scrutiny of the US president’s assertion. As always at Knoema, we turn to the data. The official report by the UK's Office for National Statistics (ONS) confirms that reported crime, including fraud, has increased by 13 percent since last year, yet this is neither the only or necessarily the best measure of crime given underreporting of crime to police. The Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW), conducted by Kantar Public on behalf of the ONS, is an alternate measure that the UK government uses to track crime. While ONS data from police reports and the CSEW survey provide a more comprehensive picture than any single source, ONS notes that official statistics cannot provide an estimate of all crime in any country and can only be used to uncover long-term and emerging trends in crime.The CSEW survey of approximately 35,000 households in England and Wales asks whether households have experienced victimization in the past year. The survey includes crimes not reported to the police and covers violence, robbery, theft, criminal damage offenses, and fraud and computer misuse, an experimental statistic introduced this year.According to the CSEW estimates, crime in the UK  has decreased constantly since 2012 to 5.8 million offenses in the year ending June 2017, which is a 9 percent decrease from the previous year. In contrast, police recorded crime data shows crime incidents on an upward trend since 2015 reaching 4.5 million cases in 2017, a 14 percent increase from 2016. These figures, however, do not include fraud offenses, an additional 653,000 cases.Neither the police reports or CSEW transparently reports "terrorism" to support President Trump's red flag about the role of terrorism in any increase in crime in the UK. The ONS also points out that a genuine increase in crime was not the only reason that police recorded crime began to increase. Improvements in crime recording and more victims reporting crime were also significant factors behind the increase. Public order offenses, violence without injury, and vehicle offenses contributed the largest share to the increase in police recorded crimes, making up nearly 44 percent of the change. Per CSEW, a single offense, ’other theft of personal property,’ accounted for 37 percent of the decrease in CSEW reported crimes.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
People Killed by Police in United States, 2015 //knoema.fr/gzmgbld/people-killed-by-police-in-united-states-2015 2018-09-11T01:14:20Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
People Killed by Police in United States, 2015

US police and other law enforcement agencies killed 1,146 persons last year, according to "The Counted", project by The Guardian, which is aimed to build a comprehensive record of such fatalities, monitor their demographics and to tell the stories of how those people died. Approximately 20% of all persons killed had not attempted to use weapons, whereas roughly 50% of them attempted to use or used firearm. Nevertheless, this information is difficult to verify because often the only information available comes directly from law enforcement officials. In some cases, friends and relatives of people killed will dispute this official account. Helping to contribute to ongoing national conversations about race and policing, the Guardian has made every effort to find and express a race/ethnicity for all the individuals represented in the database. Thus, we now can observe the distribution of fatalities by race/ethnicity with whites contributing to a half of all cases.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Active Hate Groups in the United States, 2003-2015 //knoema.fr/cuonvic/active-hate-groups-in-the-united-states-2003-2015 2018-08-28T07:35:09Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Active Hate Groups in the United States, 2003-2015

In 2015, at least 892 "hate" groups were operating throughout the United States, according to Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC). This represents a 14 percent increase from the 784 groups recorded a year before. Still, the current figures are lower than the all-time high in 2011 as traditional organised extremism continues to shrink in favor of collective and individual cyber-based activism. The SPLC defines a hate group as an organised movement that has beliefs or practices that attack or malign an entire class of people based on religion, race, sexual orientation, gender, nationality, and other immutable characteristics. The SPLC monitors the activities of such domestic hate groups as the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), neo-Nazi, racist skinhead, black separatist, Christian Identity, white nationalist, neo-Confederate, and general hate (or, "other").  Through the work of the SPLC, disturbing and enlightening trends that underscore the origins and means of continued existence in modern US society emerge:  The oldest US-based hate group is also the largest. The most populous hate group is the Ku Klux Klan, with an estimated 5,000 to 8,000 members among its 190 chapters. Almost one-third of the chapters (52) are registered in the state of Texas. Founded in 1865, the KKK is also the oldest of the American hate groups and has historically targeted black Americans, members of the Jewish and Catholic churches, homosexuals, and immigrants.  Hate groups are increasingly focused on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender persons. The composition of the general hate group has significantly changed during the last five years. While the number of anti-immigrant, radical traditional Catholic, and anti-Muslim groups remained steady, the number of the anti-LGBT groups expanded almost twofold. One of the reasons for for the expansion was spreading opposition to same-sex marriage and related issues that have been at the forefront of US politics and legislation. The upcoming US presidential election has also increased the activity of the anti-LGBT movement, as the demonization of the LGBT community has proven to be politically expedient for some candidates. For example, Donald Trump's campaign released a “Free to Believe” broadcast that was organized by the Family Research Council, a group the SPLC categorizes as an anti-LGBT. Neo-Nazi groups are on the decline even as media glare returns. The number of groups espousing racial identity, such as neo-Nazi, racist skinhead and white nationalist decreased steadily during 2015. Among them, the neo-Nazi group saw the most notable decline with 45 of its chapters being shut down last year. US-based neo-Nazi activism has hit recent international media headlines in connection with the murder of British MP Jo Cox. The killer, Thomas Mair, was said to have bought books from a US-based neo-Nazi group. Mair's collection included a guide on how to make a homemade gun.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Homicide rates by country and income group //knoema.fr/csjbqnb/homicide-rates-by-country-and-income-group 2018-08-01T10:57:20Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Homicide rates by country and income group

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Crime in Major Cities Around the World //knoema.fr/pcnnspc/crime-in-major-cities-around-the-world 2018-04-24T06:45:05Z Praneeth M manchikanti knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1022350
Crime in Major Cities Around the World

Beautiful and interesting cities with rich histories can be found around the world. Unfortunately, some cities are set apart not by their beauty or history but the relative safety of tourists in those cities. How can you know if a city is safe to visit? You may want to leave emotion and sentiment aside in favor of more objective data from the likes of international agencies such as UNODC or step into another's shoes and review experience-based data sources such as Numbeo.Numbeo publishes crime level ratings for 378 cities around the world. These ratings are based on surveys of visitors who answer questions on the Numbeo website regarding their perceptions of the safety of walking at night, concerns about muggings, robberies, and carjackings, and so on. A Numbeo crime level lower than 20 is considered "very low", so if you are risk adverse, cities within this category might be for you. Consider visiting Abu Dhabi, Munich, Singapore, Tokyo, or Tbilisi. By the same token, you might want to avoid visiting Caracas, San Pedro Sula, Pietermaritzburg, and Fortaleza based on the "very high" crime levels (scores of 80+) in these cities.Risk adversity could actually cost you the chance to visit most of Latin America and Africa, which have no ranked cities within the very low or low crime level rankings on Numbeo. A comparison of the Numbeo crime index to socio-economic indicators from the OECD shows that crime levels are higher on average in cities with higher youth dependency ratios and population density. In other words, if the number of young people (ages 14 and below) is high relative to the number of working-age people (ages 15-64) then the crime level in the city will probably be higher. The same scenario plays out with population density within a city: the greater the population living in a city's core areas, the higher the crime level.For example, Mexico City - where 95 percent of the population lives in its core areas and the ratio of youth to working age adults is 34.5 - has the world's 16th highest homicide rate and a "high" rating on the Numbeo crime index. According to the World Bank, more than half of the crimes in Mexico are committed by its youth.

Praneeth M manchikanti knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1022350
Crime Statistics: Gun Violence and Income Inequality //knoema.fr/kdabqlc/crime-statistics-gun-violence-and-income-inequality 2018-01-14T15:01:46Z Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crime Statistics: Gun Violence and Income Inequality

People in Honduras, Salvador, Jamaica, Venezuela, and Guatemala have the highest probability to be shot and killed. A comparison between the rate of homicide by firearms and socio-economic indicators shows a correlation between high rates of income inequality and higher rates of homicide by firearms. Countries with GINI coefficients exceeding 0.45 are at higher risk of homicide by firearm. Gun deaths (number)         Homicides by firearm (%)       Homicide by firearm rate (per 100,000 population)           Social networks & crime rate

Misha Gusev knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000560
Crime Statistics of the United States //knoema.fr/hklrhhc/crime-statistics-of-the-united-states 2017-11-17T14:21:24Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Crime Statistics of the United States

Over the past two decades, the United States has seen a significant decrease in crime. Between 1991 and 2013 crime rate fell from 1,311 to 689 offenses per 100,000 population. In absolute terms, a number of crimes reduced by 8.5 million during the reference period from 28.3 million in 1991 to 19.8 million in 2013. The estimated number of violent crimes in the nation decreased 0.2 percent in 2014 when compared with 2013 data, according to FBI figures. Property crimes decreased by 4.3 percent, marking the 12th straight year the collective estimates for these offenses declined. The 2014 statistics show the estimated rate of violent crime was 365.5 offenses per 100,000 inhabitants, and the property crime rate was 2,596.1 offenses per 100,000 inhabitants. The violent crime rate declined 1.0 percent compared to the 2013 rate, and the property crime rate declined 5.0 percent. In 2014, there were an estimated 1,165,383 violent crimes. Murder and nonnegligent manslaughter decreased 0.5 percent and robbery decreased 5.6 percent when compared with estimates from 2013. Rape (legacy definition) and aggravated assault, however, increased 2.4 percent and 2.0 percent, respectively. Nationwide, there were an estimated 8,277,829 property crimes. The estimated numbers of each of the property crimes show declines when compared with the previous year’s estimates. Burglaries dropped 10.5 percent, larceny-thefts declined 2.7 percent, and motor vehicle thefts were down 1.5 percent.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
The Financial Secrecy Index: The world's biggest tax havens //knoema.fr/kahnmyc/the-financial-secrecy-index-the-world-s-biggest-tax-havens 2016-05-20T05:14:51Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
The Financial Secrecy Index: The world's biggest tax havens

The Financial Secrecy Index (FSI) was launched in November 2015 to provide a ranking of jurisdictions according to their secrecy and the scale of their offshore financial activities. Designed to be politically neutral, the focus of the tool is to expand our understanding of global financial secrecy, tax havens or secrecy jurisdictions, and illicit financial flows or capital flight. The FSI uses a combination of qualitative and quantitative data to create a single measure of each jurisdiction’s contribution to the global problem of financial secrecy: Qualitative data - the Secrecy Score.This information is drawn from laws, regulations, cooperation with information exchange processes and other verifiable data sources, to develop a secrecy score for each jurisdiction. Secrecy jurisdictions with the highest secrecy scores are more opaque in the operations they host, less engaged in information sharing with other national authorities and less compliant with international norms relating to combating money-laundering. Lack of transparency and unwillingness to engage in effective information exchange makes a secrecy jurisdiction a more attractive location for routing illicit financial flows and for concealing criminal and corrupt activities. The top 20 most secretive jurisdictions - all scoring 75 or higher - are dominated by small island countries in the South Pacific and Oceania all the way to the Caribbean. Some large economies, such as the United Arab Emirates, also member among this secretive group. Quantitative data - the Global Scale Weighting. The share of each jurisdiction's offshore financial services export activity in the global total is transformed into the global scale weighting. To do this, the FSI team uses publicly available data about the trade in international financial services of each jurisdiction. As necessary because of missing data, the FSI team follows the IMF methodology to extrapolate from stock measures to generate flow estimates. Jurisdictions with the largest weighting are those that play the biggest role in the market for financial services offered to non-residents. It terms of offshore financial services exports, the US is the unsurpising leader at roughly 20 percent of the global total. Other than the US, only the UK and Luxembourg exceed more than a 10 percent share with 17.4 and 11.6 percent, respectively. Read more about offshore entities and tax havens in our recent Viz of the Day about the Panama Papers.

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Crimes in Uganda //knoema.fr/xvdmwhg/crimes-in-uganda 2016-02-04T06:49:46Z adept B01 B01 knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1005660
Crimes in Uganda

adept B01 B01 knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1005660
Uganda crime statistics //knoema.fr/lejkofd/uganda-crime-statistics 2016-02-04T06:49:45Z Data Geek knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000610
Uganda crime statistics

Data Geek knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000610
Crime Rates in Low-income Economies //knoema.fr/mzexrdf/crime-rates-in-low-income-economies 2016-01-11T11:11:36Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
Crime Rates in Low-income Economies

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Homicide //knoema.fr/stukkcg/international-crime-statistics-homicide 2015-12-10T13:57:49Z Sergei S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1133840
International Crime Statistics: Homicide

Sergei S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1133840
International Crime Statistics: Total Sexual Violence //knoema.fr/wgbiveg/international-crime-statistics-total-sexual-violence 2015-12-09T07:34:42Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Total Sexual Violence

"Sexual violence” means rape and sexual assault, including Sexual Offences against Children.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Rape //knoema.fr/uaeoobf/international-crime-statistics-rape 2015-12-09T07:30:48Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Rape

“Rape” means sexual intercourse without valid consent. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Sexual Offences //knoema.fr/vworucb/international-crime-statistics-sexual-offences 2015-12-09T07:26:14Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Sexual Offences

"Sexual offences against children" is defined as crimes of a sexual nature committed against children. These crimes include child pornography offences, procuring a child for prostitution, statutory rape of a person below the age of consent and other offences related to the sexual exploitation of children.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Robbery //knoema.fr/jkbxqg/international-crime-statistics-robbery 2015-12-09T07:21:57Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Robbery

"Robbery" means the theft of property from a person, overcoming resistance by force or threat of force. Where possible, the category Robbery should include muggings (bag-snatching) and theft with violence and exclude pick pocketing and extortion.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Kidnapping //knoema.fr/lqiovud/international-crime-statistics-kidnapping 2015-12-09T07:17:58Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Kidnapping

“Kidnapping” means unlawfully detaining a person or persons against their will (including through the use of force, threat, fraud or enticement) for the purpose of demanding for their liberation an illicit gain or any other economic gain or other material benefit, or to oblige someone to do or not to do something. Kidnapping excludes disputes over child custody.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Assault //knoema.fr/dbsfvce/international-crime-statistics-assault 2015-12-09T07:14:03Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Assault

"Assault" is the act of creating apprehension of imminent harmful or offensive contact with a person. An assault is carried out by a threat of bodily harm coupled with an apparent, present ability to cause the harm. The specific meaning of assault varies between countries, but can refer to an act that causes another to apprehend immediate and personal violence, or in the more limited sense of a threat of violence caused by an immediate show of force.  United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC Assaults, Kidnapping, Robbery, Sexual Offences, Sexual Rape, Total Sexual Violence, 2015 Homicide    Burglary    Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Homicide //knoema.fr/gmzrfhe/international-crime-statistics-homicide 2015-12-09T06:49:38Z Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
International Crime Statistics: Homicide

Intentional homicide is defined as unlawful death inflicted upon a person with the intent to cause death or serious injury. United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) regularly provides global statistical series on crime, criminal justice, drug trafficking and prices, drug production, and drug use. Data produced by UNODC have multiple sources. Member States regularly submit to UNODC statistics on drugs (through the Annual Report Questionnaire) and crime and criminal justice (through the annual Survey on Crime Trends and Operations of Criminal Justice Systems). Other data are collected through national surveys implemented by UNODC in cooperation with national governments or are compiled from scientific literature. UNODC also applies scientific methods to maximize the comparability of the data and to estimate regional and global statistics. UNODC develops a number of statistical standards and recommendations in the fields of crime, criminal justice and illicit drugs in collaboration with national experts and relevant international organizations. The objective is to enhance the comparability of statistics at the international level and to support country-level efforts to produce national statistics on drugs, crime and criminal justice. Source: UNODC International Homicide Statistics, 2015 Homicide    Burglary     Motor Vehicle Theft    Housebreaking    Assault    Kidnapping    Robbery    Sexual Offences    Rape    Total Sexual Violence

Alex Kulikov knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1847910
US Firearms Trace Data, 2013 //knoema.fr/aamtoqf/us-firearms-trace-data-2013 2015-10-26T12:08:04Z Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
US Firearms Trace Data, 2013

           The 2013 report includes a state-by-state breakdown of types and calibers of firearms recovered and traced, source states, criminal offenses associated with the crime guns, time-to-crime, and age ranges of crime gun possessors at the time of recovery. Key findings of this year’s report include pistols as the most common firearm type recovered and traced, 9 mm as the top caliber recovered and traced, and 11.08 years as the average time-to-crime for crime guns recovered and traced in the U.S. and its territories. The National Tracing Center (NTC) traced more than 336,000 crime guns in calendar year 2013.

Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
US Regional Statistics //knoema.fr/ckeosyd/us-regional-statistics 2015-10-26T12:07:33Z Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
US Regional Statistics

Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
Dowry Crimes in India //knoema.fr/shsocjc/dowry-crimes-in-india 2012-10-17T11:24:44Z Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220
Dowry Crimes in India

87% of registered Dowry crimes are Harrasement/Torture. 8391 Dowry deaths (registered cases) happened in Modern India (2010).  For more Crime against Woment statistics, refer Statistics from National Crime Records Bureau.

Balaji S knoema.fr://knoema.fr/user/1000220