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The Local Determinants of Victimization

Camille Hemet

SciencePo Working papers Main from HAL

Abstract: This paper explores the determinants of victimization at the neighborhood level, using data from the French victimization survey. Its contribution to the economics of crime literature is threefold. First, I provide evidence that neighborhood characteristics explain victimization better than individual characteristics. Second, I find that local unemployment rate is one of the most important factor explaining victimization, with a particularly large effect on small crimes such as motorbike theft or vandalism. I then tackle the endogenous location selection issue, by adopting the strategy developed by Bayer et al. (2008), based on the fact that the study is conducted at a very low geographic level. Third, I take advantage of the precise localization of the data to adopt a spatial approach, comparing the effect of unemployment rate in the reference neighborhood and in adjacent neighborhoods. The results support the idea that criminals are mobile across neighborhoods for more serious economic crimes, in line with the Beckerian theory of crime, but that petty crimes and vandalism do not involve any mobility, relating to the social disorganization theory.

Keywords: victimization; neighborhood effects; unemployment; geography (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2013-10
Note: View the original document on HAL open archive server: https://shs.hal.science/halshs-00873530
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Working Paper: The Local Determinants of Victimization (2013) Downloads
Working Paper: The Local Determinants of Victimization (2013) Downloads
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