Description & Citation--Study No. 4699 |
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| ICPSR Study No.: | 4699 |
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Persistent URL:
| http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR04699 |
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| Title: | National Crime Victimization Survey, 1992-2005: Concatenated Incident-Level Files |
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| Alternate Title: | NCVS, 2005 |
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| Principal Investigator(s): | United States Department of Justice. Bureau of Justice Statistics |
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| Series: | National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) Series |
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| Funding Agency: | United States Department of Justice. Bureau of Justice Statistics |
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| Bibliographic Citation: | United States Department of Justice. Bureau of Justice Statistics. National Crime Victimization Survey, 1992-2005: Concatenated Incident-Level Files [Computer file]. ICPSR04699-v3. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2008-12-16. doi:10.3886/ICPSR04699 |
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| Summary: | This data collection is an extract created from the
individual years of the National Crime Victimization Survey. Each
record contains information on a crime incident occurring in the given
calendar year. Part 1 contains all crime incidents, and data Part
2 contains the crimes of rape and attempted rape only. The National
Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), previously called the
National Crime Surveys (NCS), has been collecting data on personal and
household victimization through an ongoing survey of a
nationally-representative sample of residential addresses since
1973. The NCVS was designed with four primary objectives: (1) to
develop detailed information about the victims and consequences of
crime, (2) to estimate the number and types of crimes not reported to
the police, (3) to provide uniform measures of selected types of
crimes, and (4) to permit comparisons over time and types of
areas. The survey categorizes crimes as "personal" or "property."
Personal crimes include rape and sexual attack, robbery, aggravated
and simple assault, and purse-snatching/pocket-picking, while property
crimes include burglary, theft, motor vehicle theft, and
vandalism. Each respondent is asked a series of screen questions
designed to determine whether she or he was victimized during the
six-month period preceding the first day of the month of the
interview. A "household respondent" is also asked to report on crimes
against the household as a whole (e.g., burglary, motor vehicle
theft). The data include type of crime, month, time, and location of
the crime, relationship between victim and offender, characteristics
of the offender, self-protective actions taken by the victim during
the incident and results of those actions, consequences of the
victimization, type of property lost, whether the crime was reported
to police and reasons for reporting or not reporting, and offender use
of weapons, drugs, and alcohol. Basic demographic information such as
age, race, gender, and income is also collected, to enable analysis of
crime by various subpopulations. |
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| Subject Term(s): | assault, auto theft, burglary, crime, crime costs, crime rates, crime reporting, crime statistics, offenders, offenses, property crimes, rape, reactions to crime, robbery, sexual offenses, vandalism, victimization, victims |
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| Smallest Geographic Unit: | region |
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| Geographic Coverage: | United States |
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| Time Period: | 1992 - 2005 |
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| Date(s) of Collection: | January 1992 - June 2006 |
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| Unit of Observation: | household, person, crime incident |
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| Universe: | All persons in the United States aged 12 and over. |
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| Data Type: | survey data |
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| Data Collection Notes: | Starting with year 2005, ICPSR split the NCVS data
files into two studies, one for the concatenated incident-level files
(contained in this data collection) and one for the single-year files. This
allows for more complete documentation of variables that were added or
dropped since the inception of the NCVS is 1992. |
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| Sample: | Stratified multistage cluster sample. |
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| Weight: | The data include ADJUSTED VICTIMIZATION WEIGHT - DATA YEAR (WGTVICDY) to calculate an estimate of victimizations. These data do not include sufficient records to calculate an estimate of household or person counts. To calculate household or person counts refer to the data collections for individual years' of NCVS data. |
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| Mode of Data Collection: | computer-assisted telephone interview (CATI) |
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| face-to-face interview |
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| telephone interview |
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| Note: | A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the
summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the
file manifest. |
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| Restrictions: | This data collection may not be used for any purpose
other than statistical reporting and analysis. Use of these data to
learn the identity of any person or establishment is prohibited. |
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| Original ICPSR Release: | 2007-05-02 |
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| Version History: | The last update of this study occurred on 2008-12-16. |
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| 2008-12-16 - The data collection was updated to reflect additional industry and occupation codes provided by the United States Census Bureau. |
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| 2008-07-16 - The data were updated to reflect new weights provided by the Census Bureau. |
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| Dataset(s): | - DS1: 1992-2005 Concatenated Incident-Level File
- DS2: 1992-2005 Concatenated Incident-Level Rape Subset
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