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Incidence rates--rates of offending in personal crimes (rape, robbery, assault, and personal larceny)--are studied using data from the National Crime Survey (NCS) for 1973-1977, conducted by the U. S. Bureau of the Census. The NCS data reveal that victims' reports of offenders' sex, race, and age are strongly related to incidence rates of offending. The highest incidence rate in personal crimes is for male, black, 18 to 20 year olds. Arrest data at the national level for robbery yield comparable results. Household crimes--burglary, household larceny, and vehicle theft--in which the victims saw and were able to report offenders' sex, race, and age constituted about 5% of all household crimes. The patterns in incidence rates of offending in these household crimes closely parallel those for personal crimes. (abstract Adapted from Source: American Sociological Review, 1981. Copyright © 1981 by the American Sociological Association) 1970s Racial Factors Age Factors Adult Offender Adult Violence Adult Crime Juvenile Crime Juvenile Offender Juvenile Violence Crime Rates Violence Rates Arrest Rates Rape Offender Rape Rates Sexual Assault Offender Sexual Assault Rates Physical Assault Offender Physical Assault Rates Robbery Offender Robbery Rates Burglary Offender Burglary Rates Violence Against Women 07-02
Michael J. Hindelang (Sat,) studied this question.