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Canada and the World

        Current Events with a Canadian Perspective

 

Last update

01 February 2011

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Crime Prevention

better than Detection

 

Working with at-risk young people to keep them

out of gangs works better than waiting for

them to commit crimes and then jailing them

 

 

Crime continues its long-term downward trend in Canada, with 77,000 fewer crimes reported to police in 2008 than in the previous year.

 

Statistics Canada reported (July 2009) that, “Both the traditional crime rate and the new Crime Severity Index fell five percent, meaning that both the volume of police-reported crime and its severity decreased. Violent crime also dropped, but to a lesser extent.”

 

Politicians still Talk Tough

The good news about lower and less severe offences does not deter the Conservative government from playing the get-tough-on-crime card.

 

On its party website, the Conservatives claim, “Under the Liberals, little was done to address concerns about the increasing threat of gun, gang, and drug crime in our neighbourhoods. Conservatives have taken action to get tough on criminals and make our streets safer.”

 

Justice Minister Rob Nicholson was quoted in The Globe and Mail (July 21, 2009) as saying: “Crime is unacceptably high in this country. We’ve got quite a few pieces of legislation before Parliament right now, bills that crack down on auto theft, bills that crack down on drugs…”

 

Get Tough on Crime Approach Criticized

The Institute for the Prevention of Crime (IPC) at the University of Ottawa says the focus on punishment is wrong. In its May 25, 2009 report, Making Cities Safer: Action Briefs for Municipal Stakeholders the Institute recommends more attention be paid to the causes of such things as gun and gang violence.

 

The project manager for the study, Dr. Irvin Waller told The Globe and Mail (May 25, 2009): “They (politicians) are caught in a time warp of continuing to increase more police…with tinkering with the Criminal Code, and not looking at where the crime problem is and how you can tackle it.”

 

According to Dr. Waller, the federal government spends $15 billion a year on policing, the courts, and prisons, and just $70 million annual on crime prevention.

 

Anti-crime Strategies that Work

The IPC study looked at crime prevention programs in other jurisdictions and reported on some that worked:

 

 

Investment in Crime Prevention Pays off

The IPC recommends that municipalities should spend one dollar per capita a year on crime prevention. The Region of Waterloo that includes the cities of Kitchener, Cambridge, and Waterloo has been putting $2 per capita into plans to reduce crime. It seems to have paid off.

 

The Statistics Canada report on crime in Canada in 2008 gives Kitchener a crime severity rating of 68.9 against the Canadian average of 90.0.

 

Image credit

Skiddie2003

 

Sources

“Police-reported Crime Statistics.” Statistics Canada, July 21, 2009.

“Making Cities Safer: Action Briefs for Municipal Stakeholders.” Institute for the Prevention of Crime, May 25, 2009.

 

© Canada and the World, February 2011

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“Violent crime accounts for about 10% of crimes reported to the police. Despite declines in police-recorded violent crime in the 1990s, the rate in 2006 was more than four times higher than in 1962 (951 per 100,000 population vs 221).”

 

The Institute for the Prevention of Crime

 

 

Thirty percent of Canadians believe that levels of neighbourhood crime have increased over the past five years, but very few Canadians (9%) believe that crime in their neighbourhood is higher than other areas. Thus crime is perceived to be rising but higher in areas other than one’s own.

 

Source

Maire Gannon, Statistics Canada

July 2005