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  3. Local-Area Crime Survey, [United States], 2015, 2016

Local-Area Crime Survey, [United States], 2015, 2016

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Description

The Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) entered into a cooperative agreement with Westat to develop and evaluate a lower-cost, subnational companion survey of victimization as one piece of the subnational estimates program. The Local-Area Crime Survey (LACS) was fielded in 2015 and 2016 and is intended for use by states, municipalities, or other jurisdictions and entities to assess levels and trends in public safety. The LACS is modeled in part after the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS), conducted for BJS by the U.S. Census Bureau. One of the two major statistical programs on crime produced by the U.S. Department of Justice, the NCVS is the nation's primary source of information about criminal victimization, whether reported or not reported to police. The core NCVS methodology includes a mix of in-person and telephone interviews with household members age 12 and older selected from an area probability sample to produce reliable national-level estimates. As another part of the subnational estimates program, BJS worked with the Census Bureau to enhance and reallocate the NCVS sample to support subnational estimates for the 22 most populous states and potentially substate areas within those states. For the most part, this direct estimation component of the program will not support estimates at the local level. See the NCVS Subnational Estimates webpage on the BJS website for more information.

The goals of this research were to (1) develop and test a relatively inexpensive survey design (2) that could be administered by local jurisdictions or their vendors (3) to produce cross-jurisdiction estimates and estimates of change over time within jurisdictions that may be compared with similar estimates using NCVS data. In addition to questions about victimization experiences, the LACS included questions about perceptions of community safety and police efficacy. The rationale for including these items was that they were relevant to all households, not just victims. The hope was that these items would increase survey response rates as non-victims would have important questions to answer. The LACS served as a platform for assessing the value of these questions for the planned NCVS instrument redesign. For more information, see the NCVS Instrument Redesign webpage on the BJS website.

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Metadata

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  • Scope and Coverage
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Scope and Coverage

Smallest geographic unit
Other - Core based statistical area (CBSA)
Years Available
2015 - 2016
Universe
  • The target population is all persons 18 or older living in households in the 40 largest core based statistical areas (CBSAs). The universe of respondents for the LACS was all residential adults. A single household member acted as a proxy for the remaining, adult household members. Excluded are persons not living within these 40 CBSAs and persons under age 18, as well as those living in group quarters, who are crews of vessels, in institutions (e.g., prisons and nursing homes) or members of the armed forces living in military barracks.
Spatial coverage
  • United States
Unit of observation
  • Individual
  • Household
  • Other - crime incident
Classification
  • Crime
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