Variable

UK Data Service variable record for:

Scottish Crime and Justice Survey, 2014-2015

Variable Details

VariableCVJUSMOS
LabelMost important / only problem to solve?
Question text Which of these problems was or is the most important problem for you to solve?
Responses
-2 Refused 1
-1 Don't know 6
1 Problems to do with neighbours 415
3 Problems to do with housing or homelessness 66
4 Immigration problems 10
5 Problems with injury because of an accident 48
6 Problems to do with medical negligence 48
7 Problems with issues surrounding mental health difficulties 42
8 Problems to do with money and debt 94
9 Benefit problems 80
10 Problems with discrimination 51
11 Problems with faulty goods or services 98
12 Problems with unfair treatment by the police 42
13 Problems to do with employment, OTHER THAN finding work 58
14 Problems to do with child contact, residence or maintenance 49
15 Problems to do with divorce or separation 27
16 Problems to do with education of children 39
17 Problems to do with behaviour of a partner 68
Sysmiss 10230
DisclaimerPlease note that these frequencies are not weighted.
LocationScottish Crime and Justice Survey, 2014-2015
Interviewer InstructionsSHOW SCREEN SINGLE CODE ONLY. CAPI FORCE: IF ONLY ONE PROBLEM CODED AT COMBINATION OF CVJUS1 - 4 THEN CODE AT CVJUSMOS AND DO NOT ASK QUESTION. RANDOMISE ORDER: SHOW SHORT NAME LIST OF PROBLEMS CODED AT CVJUS1, CVJUS2, CVJUS3, CVJUS4. ## <SHORT NAME OF EACH PROBLEM>
UniverseLocation of units of observation: National;Population: Adults aged 16+ living in random-sampled private households in Scotland (victim form subsequently completed by those who had been a victim of crime in the reference period only).
SamplingMulti-stage stratified random sample;See documentation for further details.
Study TypeRepeated cross-sectional study; The survey was conducted approximately once every three years until 2006. From 2007/08-2010/11 it was conducted on an annual, financial-year, basis. From 2012-13 the SCJS moved to become a biennial survey covering the financial year, however the 2014-15 survey is the last biennial survey. The 2016-17 survey will move back to an annual survey.