UK Data Service

Catalogue

UK Data Service data catalogue record for:

British Crime Survey, 2007-2008

Title details

SN: 6066
Title: British Crime Survey, 2007-2008
Alternative title: BCS
Persistent identifier: 10.5255/UKDA-SN-6066-1
Series: Crime Survey for England and Wales, 1982-
Depositor(s): Home Office. Research, Development and Statistics Directorate
Principal investigator(s): Home Office. Research, Development and Statistics Directorate
BMRB. Social Research

Subject Categories

Crime Survey for England and Wales - Major studies
Crime and law enforcement - Law, crime and legal systems
Social attitudes and behaviour - Society and culture

Abstract

Background:
The Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW), previously known as the British Crime Survey (BCS), has been in existence since 1981. The survey traditionally asks a sole randomly selected adult, in a random sample of households, details pertaining to any instances where they, or the household, has been a victim of a crime in the previous 12 months. These are recorded in the victim form data file (VF). A wide range of questions are then asked covering demographics and crime-related subjects such as attitudes to the police and the criminal justice system (CJS). Most of the questionnaire is completed in a face-to-face interview in the respondent's home; these variables are contained within the non-victim form (NVF) data file. Since 2009, the survey has been extended to children aged 10-15 years old; one resident of that age range has also been selected at random from the household and asked about incidents where they have been a victim of crime, and other related topics. The first set of children's data, covering January-December 2009, had experimental status, and is held separately under SN 6601. From 2009-2010, the children's data cover the same period as the adult data and are included with the main dataset. Further information may be found on the ONS Crime Survey for England and Wales webpage and for the previous BCS, from the Home Office BCS Methodology webpage.

Self-completion data
A series of questions on drinking behaviour, drug use and intimate personal violence (including stalking and sexual victimisation) are administered to adults via a self-completion module which the respondent completes on a laptop computer. Children aged 10-15 years also complete a separate self-completion questionnaire. The questions are contained within the main questionnaire documents, but the data are available under Special Licence/Secure Access conditions from the UK Data Archive. Lower-level geographic variables are also available under Special Licence conditions to match to the survey. See individual survey years for further details.

History:
Up to 2001, the survey was conducted biennially. From April 2001, interviewing was carried out continually and reported on in financial year cycles and the crime reference period was altered to accommodate this change. The core sample size has increased from around 11,000 in the earlier cycles to over 40,000. Following the National Statistician's Review of Crime Statistics in June 2011 the collation and publication of Crime Statistics moved to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) from 1st April 2012, and the survey changed its name to the Crime Survey for England and Wales (CSEW) accordingly.

Scottish data:
The 1982 and 1988 BCS waves were also conducted in Scotland. The England and Wales data for 1982 and 1988 are held at the UKDA under SNs 1869 and 2706, but the Scottish data for these studies are held separately under SNs 4368 and 4599. Since 1993, separate Scottish Crime and Justice Surveys have been conducted, and these are held under GN 33330.

For the fourth edition (May 2009), a new version of the interpersonal violence (IPV) data file was deposited, with variables PV3a to PV3o corrected. The IPV file is subject to conditional access. For a full edition history, see READ file (link below).

Main Topics:
The dataset includes information from two sections of the survey, the non-victim form questionnaire and the victim form questionnaire.

The non-victim form questionnaire gathers respondent-level data: topics covered include fear of crime; perception of local area; local crime rates; victimisation screener questions; mobile phone theft; experiences of the police; attitudes to the CJS; crime prevention and security; witnessing crime; technology crime; the night-time economy and alcohol disorder; identity fraud; experiences of antisocial behaviour; crime and disorder in town centres and high streets; crime and disorder on public transport; demographic information.

The victim form contains offence-level data. Up to six different incidents are asked about for each respondent. Each of these constitutes a separate victim form and can be matched back to the respondent-level data through the variable ROWLABEL. Topics covered include the nature and circumstances of the incident, details of offenders, security measures, costs, emotional reactions, contact with the CJS and outcomes where known.

Self-completion modules were also fielded in the 2007-2008 survey, covering drug use, drinking behaviour, stolen goods and interpersonal violence (IPV - comprises data from the domestic violence and sexual victimisation modules). These modules are subject to conditional access (see Access section below).

Coverage, universe, methodology

Dates of fieldwork: April 2007, March 2008
Country: England and Wales
Spatial units: Government Office Regions
Observation units: Individuals
Kind of data: Numeric
Universe: National
Adults
Crime victims
Criminal offences
Adults aged 16 and over in private households in England and Wales during 2007-2008. Analysis of the representative individual or household population of England and Wales is possible.
Time dimensions: Repeated cross-sectional study
Sampling procedures: Multi-stage stratified random sample
Number of units: 46,983 cases (non-victim form); 16,189 cases (victim form)
Method of data collection: Face-to-face interview
Self-completion
Weighting: Weighting used. See documentation for details.

Keywords

ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICEADOLESCENTSADVICE
ADVOCACY (LEGAL)AGEAGGRESSIVENESS
AIRPORTSALCOHOL CONSUMPTIONALCOHOLISM
AMPHETAMINESANABOLIC STEROIDSANGER
ASSAULTATTITUDESBICYCLES
BINGE DRINKINGBURGLARYCAMERAS
CANNABISCAR PARKING AREASCHILDREN
CHRONIC ILLNESSCLUBSCOCAINE
COLOUR TELEVISION RECEIVERSCOMBATIVE SPORTSCOMMUNITIES
COMMUNITY ACTIONCOMMUNITY BEHAVIOURCOMMUNITY SERVICE (PUNISHMENT)
COMPUTERSCOSTSCOUNSELLING
COURT CASESCREDIT CARD USECRIME
CRIME PREVENTIONCRIME VICTIMSCRIMINAL COURTS
CRIMINAL DAMAGECRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONCRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
CRIMINALSCULTURAL GOODSCULTURAL IDENTITY
DAMAGEDEBILITATIVE ILLNESSDISCIPLINE
DOGSDOMESTIC RESPONSIBILITIESDOMESTIC VIOLENCE
DOORSDRINKING BEHAVIOURDRIVING
DRUG ABUSEECONOMIC ACTIVITYECONOMIC VALUE
ECSTASY (DRUG)EDUCATIONAL ATTENDANCEELECTRONIC MAIL
EMERGENCY AND PROTECTIVE SERVICESEMOTIONAL DISTURBANCESEMOTIONAL STATES
EMPLOYEESEMPLOYMENTEMPLOYMENT HISTORY
ENGLAND AND WALESETHNIC GROUPSEVERYDAY LIFE
FAMILIESFAMILY MEMBERSFEAR
FEAR OF CRIMEFINANCIAL COMPENSATIONFINANCIAL RESOURCES
FIREFIRE DAMAGEFIRE SAFETY MEASURES
FREQUENCYFRIENDSGENDER
HEADS OF HOUSEHOLDHEALTHHEALTH PROFESSIONALS
HEROINHOME CONTENTS INSURANCEHOME OWNERSHIP
HOSPITALIZATIONHOUSEHOLD HEAD'S ECONOMIC ACTIVITYHOUSEHOLD HEAD'S OCCUPATION
HOUSEHOLD INCOMEHOUSEHOLDSHOUSING AGE
HOUSING TENUREINDUSTRIESINFORMATION MATERIALS
INFORMATION SOURCESINJURIESINSURANCE CLAIMS
INTERNET ACCESSINTERNET USEINTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION
INTERPERSONAL CONFLICTINTERPERSONAL RELATIONSINTIMIDATION
INTRUDER ALARM SYSTEMSJUDGESJUDGMENTS (LEGAL)
JURIESJUVENILE DELINQUENCYLANDLORDS
LAW ENFORCEMENTLEARNING DISABILITIESLEAVE
LEGAL PROCEDURELIGHTINGLOCAL GOVERNMENT SERVICES
LOCKSLSD (DRUG)MAGIC MUSHROOMS
MAGISTRATESMARITAL STATUSMEDIATION
MEDICAL CAREMETHADONEMOBILE PHONES
MOTOR VEHICLESNEIGHBOURHOOD WATCH SCHEMESNEIGHBOURHOODS
NEIGHBOURSNEWSPAPER READERSHIPNEWSPAPERS
NOISE POLLUTIONNON-CUSTODIAL PUNISHMENTOFFENCES
OFFENSIVE TELEPHONE CALLSONLINE SHOPPINGPAYMENTS
PERSONAL CONTACTPERSONAL FASHION GOODSPERSONAL IDENTIFICATION DOCUMENTS
POLICE ACTIVITIESPOLICE OFFICERSPOLICE SERVICES
POLITICAL PARTICIPATIONPORNOGRAPHYPRISON SENTENCES
PROBATIONPROSECUTION SERVICEPUBLIC HOUSES
PUBLIC OPINIONPUBLIC TRANSPORTPUNISHMENT
PURCHASINGQUALIFICATIONSQUALITY OF LIFE
RACIAL CONFLICTRADIO RECEIVERSRECIDIVISM
REDRESS OF GRIEVANCESREFUSERENTED ACCOMMODATION
RESIDENTIAL MOBILITYRESPONSIBILITYRISK
ROBBERYSAFETY AND SECURITYSAFETY AND SECURITY MEASURES
SCHOOL PUNISHMENTSSECURITY SYSTEMSSELF-EMPLOYED
SEXUAL ASSAULTSEXUAL BEHAVIOURSEXUAL HARASSMENT
SEXUAL OFFENCESSEXUAL ORIENTATIONSHARED HOME OWNERSHIP
SICK LEAVESLEEP DISORDERSSMALL BUSINESSES
SMOKINGSOCIAL ACTIVITIES (LEISURE)SOCIAL HOUSING
SOCIAL PARTICIPATIONSOCIAL SUPPORTSOLVENT ABUSE
SORROWSPOUSESSPOUSE'S ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
STIMULANT DRUGSSTUDENTSSUPERVISORY STATUS
THEFTTIED HOUSINGTRAFFIC OFFENCES
TRAININGTRAINING COURSESTRANQUILLISERS
UNDERAGE DRINKINGUNEMPLOYMENTUNWAGED WORKERS
VAGRANTSVIDEO RECORDERSVISITS (PERSONAL)
VOLUNTARY WELFARE ORGANIZATIONSWEAPONSWINDOWS
WITNESS INTIMIDATIONWITNESSESWORKING TIME
WORKPLACEYOUTH

Administrative and access information

Date of release:
First edition: 12 November 2008
Latest edition: 24 March 2009 ( Edition 3 )
Copyright: Crown copyright material is reproduced with the permission of the Controller of HMSO and the Queen's Printer for Scotland
Access conditions: The depositor has specified that registration is required and standard conditions of use apply. The depositor may be informed about usage. See terms and conditions for further information.
Please note:
Ordering self-completion module data
The self-completion modules contained within the CSEW (formerly BCS) contain sensitive data, and so are not available for End User Licence (standard access). Express permission has to be sought from the depositor before the files may be released to users. A Special Licence system has been introduced and the data are only available to ONS Approved Researchers. However, for 2007-2008 and earlier survey years, the previous conditional access system is still currently in place. Therefore, users should follow the instructions below depending on the year of data required.

BCS 1982 to 2007/08
Users who require self-completion modules should order the data online. To order the data, registered users should use the relevant Download/order link(s), select a previously registered usage or register a new use of data, tick the box(es) in the 'Other media' column and proceed from there. Users should specify in the 'Notes' section which self-completion module(s) they require. Upon receipt of the order the UK Data Service will send the prospective user a form to complete. Users are advised to provide a reasonably detailed description of their intended use of the data. If further information is required, contact the UKDS HelpDesk. This applies to the following modules:

  • drugs data from the 1996, 1998, 2000, 2001, 2001-2002, 2002-2003, 2003-2004, 2005-2006, 2006-2007 and 2007-2008 surveys (SNs 3832, 4081, 4463, 4786, 4787, 5059, 5324, 5347, 5543, 5755 and 6066)
  • domestic violence data from 1996 (SN 3832)
  • stalking data from 1998 (SN 4081)
  • drinking behaviour data from 2002-2003 (SN 5059), 2003-2004 (SN 5324), 2004-2005 (SN 5347), 2005-2006 (SN 5543), 2006-2007 (SN 5755) and 2007-2008 (SN 6066)
  • interpersonal violence (IPV) data from 2001 (SN 4786), 2004-2005 (SN 5347), 2005-2006 (SN 5543), 2006-2007 (SN 5755) and 2007-2008 (SN 6066 - includes data from the 2007-2008 domestic violence and sexual victimisation modules)
  • sexual victimisation/assault data from 2000 (SN 4463), 2005-2006 (SN 5543) and 2006-2007 (SN 5755)
  • stolen goods data from 2002-2003 (SN 5059), 2003-2004 (SN 5324), 2005-2006 (SN 5543), 2006-2007 (SN 5755) and 2007-2008 (SN 6066)
It should be noted that the self-completion data are not allowed to be used for teaching purposes. The sexual victimisation self-completion modules from 1996 and 1998 (SNs 3832 and 4081) are currently unavailable.

BCS/CSEW 2008/09 onwards
For the 2008/09 onwards, data from the self-completion modules (described above), a low-level geographic variables dataset and (from 2009/10) data from the children's self-completion module, have been held under separate study numbers to the main survey and are are available only to Office for National Statistics (ONS) Approved Researchers, under Special Licence access conditions. The same applies to SN 6422, British Crime Survey, 2006-2007: Special Licence Access, Social Heterogeneity Variables. From April 2012, responsibility for the survey moved to the ONS, and the BCS became the CSEW. From 2011/12 onwards, the interpersonal violence module (IPV) (comprising data on domestic violence, sexual victimisation and stalking) became available only under Secure Access conditions; prospective users should contact the UKDS HelpDesk in the first instance.

Availability: UK Data Service
Contact: Get in touch

Documentation

TitleFile NameSize (KB)
Questionnaire 2007-2008 6066questionnaire.pdf 736
BCS 2007-2008 Technical Report Vol.1 6066techreport1.pdf 753
BCS 2007-2008 Technical Report Vol.2 6066techreport2.pdf 3238
User Guide 6066userguide.pdf 1345
Study information and citation UKDA_Study_6066_Information.htm 32
READ File read6066.htm 12

Related studies:

British Crime Survey, 1982: England and Wales Data (SN 1869)
British Crime Survey, 1984 (SN 2077)
British Crime Survey, 1988 (SN 2706)
British Crime Survey, 1992 (SN 3202)
British Crime Survey, 1994 (SN 3591)
British Crime Survey, 1996 (SN 3832)
British Crime Survey, 1998 (SN 4081)
British Crime Survey, 1982 : Scottish Data (SN 4368)
British Crime Survey, 2000 (SN 4463)
British Crime Survey, 1988 : Scottish Data (SN 4599)
British Crime Survey, 2001 (SN 4786)
British Crime Survey, 2001-2002 (SN 4787)
British Crime Survey, 2002-2003 (SN 5059)
British Crime Survey, 2003-2004 (SN 5324)
British Crime Survey, 2004-2005 (SN 5347)
British Crime Survey, 2005-2006 (SN 5543)
British Crime Survey, 2006-2007 (SN 5755)
British Crime Survey, 2008-2009 (SN 6367)
British Crime Survey Experimental Data: Children Aged 10-15 Years, January-December, 2009 (SN 6601)
British Crime Survey, 2009-2010 (SN 6627)
British Crime Survey, 2010-2011 (SN 6937)
Crime Survey for England and Wales, 2011-2012 (SN 7252)
Young People and Crime Survey, 1992-1993 (SN 3814)
Youth Lifestyles Survey, 1998-1999 (SN 4345)
British Crime Survey, 2000: Teaching Dataset (SN 4740)
British Crime Survey, 2000: X4L SDiT Teaching Dataset (SN 4918)
Experience and Expression in the Fear of Crime, 2003-2004 (SN 5822)
British Crime Survey 2007-2008: Teaching Dataset (SN 6561)
British Crime Survey 2007-2008: Unrestricted Access Teaching Dataset (SN 6891)

Related case studies:

Surprising psychology students with crime data
Using government survey evidence to explore fear of crime

Related support guides:

Weighting the Social Surveys
Analysing crime data using Nesstar: Fear of crime using the British Crime Survey, 2000:X4L SDiT Teaching Dataset (Video)

Publications

Links to more recent publications may be found on the ONS Crime Survey for England and Wales webpages and the Home Office BCS Methodology webpages.

Previous technical reports and papers, 1982-2001:

Wood, D. (1982) British crime survey: technical report, London: SCPR.

National Opinion Polls (1985) 1984 British Crime Survey: technical report, London: NOP.

Social and Community Planning Research (1988) 1988 British Crime Survey (England and Wales): technical report, London: SCPR.

Allen, D. and Payne, D. (1991) Crime prevention in Scotland - findings from the 1988 British Crime Survey, Scottish Office.

Allen, D. and Payne, D. (1991) The public and the police in Scotland - findings from the 1988 British Crime Survey, Scottish Office.

Payne, D. (1992) Crime in Scotland - findings from the 1988 British Crime Survey, Scottish Office.

Kinsey, R. and Anderson, S. (1992) Crime and quality of life - public perceptions and experiences of crime in Scotland: findings from the 1988 British Crime Survey, Scottish Office.

Hales, J. (1993) 1992 British Crime Survey (England and Wales): technical report, London: SCPR.

White, A. and Malbon, G. (June 1995) 1994 British Crime Survey: technical report, London: OPCS Social Survey Division.

Hales, J. and Stratford, N. (1996?) 1996 British Crime Survey (England and Wales): technical report, London: SCPR.

Hales, J. and Stratford, N. (1999) 1998 British Crime Survey (England and Wales): technical report, London: SCPR.

Hales, J., et al. (2001) 2000 British Crime Survey (England and Wales): technical report, London: National Centre for Social Research.

Budd, T. (2001) Burglary: practice messages from the British Crime Survey, Briefing Note 5/01, London: Home Office.

Kinshott, G. (2001) Vehicle related thefts: practice messages from the British Crime Survey, Briefing Note 6/01, London: Home Office.

Mattinson, J. (2001) Stranger and acquaintance violence: practice messages from the British Crime Survey, Briefing Note 7/01, London: Home Office.

Budd, T. and Sims, L. (2001) Antisocial behaviour and disorder: findings from the 2000 British Crime Survey, Findings 145, London: Home Office.

Variables

Back to top