FEAR OF CRIME IN RESIDENTIAL COMMUNITIES |
| |
Authors: | R. LANCE SHOTLAND SCOTT C. HAYWARD CARLOTTA YOUNG MARGARET L. SIGNORELLA KENNETH MINDINGALL JOHN K. KENNEDY MICHAEL J. ROVINE ED WARD F. DANOWITZ |
| |
Affiliation: | Pennsylvania State University |
| |
Abstract: | Three variables were hypothesized to cause a fear of crime and a potential change in behavior. These were: (1) crimes against a person rather than crimes against property; (2) a crime committed in an area frequented rather than a crime occurring in an area one never entered; (3) a recurring crime rather than a crime that occurred once. Two different samples of female subjects (n = 249) were approached at their residences and were asked to read one of a number of fictitious crime stories that the news media supposedly had not reported and to complete two scales measuring: (1) an emotional response to crime and (2) a potential behavioral response to crime. The results indicate that a physical assault produces both more fear and more potential behavioral change than a burglary. A crime that occurs eight times causes people to consider taking precautions in comparison to a crime that occurs once. There is some evidence that a crime in an area one frequents causes more fear than a crime occurring in an area one never enters. |
| |
Keywords: | |
|