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Journal Article

Citation

Fielding J, Fielding N. J. Criminol. (New York) 2013; 2013: 1-13.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Hindawi Publishing)

DOI

10.1155/2013/284259

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This paper demonstrates the use of mixed methods discovery techniques to explore public perceptions of community safety and risk, using computational techniques that combine and integrate layers of information to reveal connections between community and place. Perceived vulnerability to crime is conceptualised using an etic/emic framework. The etic "outsider" viewpoint imposes its categorisation of vulnerability not only on areas ("crime hot spots" or "deprived neighbourhoods") but also on socially constructed groupings of individuals (the "sick" or the "poor") based on particular qualities considered relevant by the analyst. The range of qualities is often both narrow and shallow. The alternative, emic, "insider" perspective explores vulnerability based on the meanings held by the individuals informed by their lived experience. Using recorded crime data and Census-derived area classifications, we categorise an area in Southern England from an etic viewpoint. Mobile interviews with local residents and police community support officers and researcher-led environmental audits provide qualitative emic data. GIS software provides spatial context to analytically link both quantitative and qualitative data. We demonstrate how this approach reveals hidden sources of community resilience and produces findings that explicate low level social disorder and vandalism as turns in a "dialogue" of resistance against urbanisation and property development.


Language: en

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