Many fear crime, but it's more anxiety

Published: May 20, 2008 at 7:00 PM

SHEFFIELD, England, May 20 (UPI) -- Although many people fear crime, a British study suggests real, immediate threats to people are rarely encountered.

Dr. Stephen Farrall of Sheffield University and Dr. Jonathan Jackson of the London School of Economics found that people did not neatly separate out the issue of crime from general anxiety toward social stability.

"The fear of crime is an important social indicator of any society's well-being," Farrall said in a statement.

But everyday concerns about crime in England and Wales are much less frequent than previously thought, the researchers said.

The study used data from the 2003 to 2004 British Crime Survey of England and Wales, which interviews about 40,000 people each year.

The fear of crime is more often a broader anxiety than a concrete worry about the threat of victimization -- but in any case, these emotions are all bound up in public concerns about social change, Jackson said.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
Study says most college linemen are obese
Lutz to keep GM's secrets -- for now
Toxins used to halt Asian carp advance
Crude oil prices drop Wednesday
Stricter NFL guidelines on concussions
Alaska businesses fret beluga protections
UPI NewsTrack Business
fark
Dad brings home full-size Barbie for daughter's Christmas gift. Soon, she starts moving around on...
Advisory to Maersk Alabama: "Stay 600 miles offshore." Capt. Phillips to crew: "Belay that; 350...
Things you find when cleaning out the basement of a building you just bought: boxes of junk, garbage,...
Denver School Board gets into a spat on Monday, decide the best use of taxpayer dollars is to talk...
Creepy town full of blond, blue-eyed Brazilians may be a Nazi legacy. Hey, this would make a good...
Photoshop these pollen producers