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Juvenile Victimization from an International Perspective

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The Many Faces of Youth Crime

Abstract

Delinquency and victimization are correlated. However, this does not imply that all victims are offenders, or that all offenders become victims of crimes. Elderly people and women especially commit substantially fewer offences, but nonetheless at times may experience victimization. However, among juveniles, the correlation between victimization and delinquency is generally assumed to be stronger, given that (young) offenders often expose themselves to increased risks of victimization. A delinquent lifestyle may indeed be among the strongest predictors of violent victimization. This in itself is one of many good reasons to look more closely at victimization among juveniles. A second motivation is that juveniles are being victimized disproportionately compared to other age groups, and crime is an essential aspect of the quality of life at this age. Many juveniles are obviously not regularly involved in delinquency, but are genuinely affected if violence occurs frequently in the age group they socialize with in everyday contexts. Since minors are notoriously poorly represented in national and international crime victimization surveys, this study offers a good occasion to look more closely at the factors which influence the probability of such experiences at this age, which may not necessarily be the same during later periods in life.

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Notes

  1. 1.

    Screening questions were as follows: “Thinking back over the last 12 months, did any of the ­following happen to you – 
 (a) Someone wanted you to give him/her money or something else (watch, shoes, mobile phone) and threatened you if you did not do it?; (b) Someone hit you ­violently or hurt you so much that you needed to see a doctor?; (c) Something was stolen from you (such as a book, money, mobile phone, sport equipment, bicycle 
?); (d) You were bullied at school (other students humiliated you or made fun of you, hit or kicked you, or excluded you from their group?)”.

  2. 2.

    In capital cities (of six new EU member countries) the overall victimization rate is over 35% (GruszczyƄska et al. 2008).

  3. 3.

    No data from Iceland, Poland, Slovenia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina were taken into account in this analysis. For these countries, data were not available for all grades (from 7 to 9) due to differences in school systems.

  4. 4.

    Associations were considered significant if p  <  0.01. All variables were transformed into a dichotomous form.

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Correspondence to Beata GruszczyƄska .

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GruszczyƄska, B., Lucia, S., Killias, M. (2012). Juvenile Victimization from an International Perspective. In: The Many Faces of Youth Crime. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-9455-4_4

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