4530.0 - Crime Victimisation, Australia, 2012-13 Quality Declaration
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 12/02/2014
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VICTIMISATION (see Datacube 1, Table 1) In the 12 months prior to interview in 2012–13, Households were more likely to be a victim of malicious property damage than any of the other selected household crimes and less likely to be a victim of motor vehicle theft than any of the other types of household crime.Endnote 1 Of the 8.9 million households in Australia, an estimated:
Footnote(s): (a) The number of households experiencing a household crime, expressed as a percentage of the total number of households. Source(s): Crime Victimisation, Australia REPORTING TO POLICE (see Datacube 1, Table 1) The proportion of households that reported the most recent incident of each type of household crime to police varied depending on the type of crime. The reporting rate for households that experienced motor vehicle theft was higher than for any other selected household crime, while the reporting rate was lower for other theft (than for any other selected household crime). Households that experienced attempted break-in were less likely to report their most recent incident to police than those that experienced break-in. In 2012-13 an estimated:
Footnote(s): (a) The total number of households that had the most recent incident of the household crime reported to police, expressed as a percentage of all households experiencing the household crime. The incident may have been reported by any member of the household or another person. Source(s): Crime Victimisation, Australia EXPERIENCE OF MULTIPLE VICTIMISATION (see Datacube 2, Table 8) Table B (below) provides a summary of the number and proportion of households that experienced a single incident compared to multiple incidents of each type of selected household crime. For each type of household crime, the majority of household victims experienced only one incident. Households were more likely to experience one incident than either two or three or more incidents of break-in, attempted break-in, theft from a motor vehicle, malicious property damage and other theft in the 12 months prior to interview in 2012-13.
Table B: MULTIPLE VICTIMISATION, Household crime, 2012-13
ENDNOTES 1 All comparisons discussed have been tested for statistical significance with a 95% level of confidence that there is a real difference between the two populations being tested. Only data with a relative standard error (RSE) of less than 25% is referred to in the text of this publication. For further information, refer to the Technical Note. 2 Due to the relatively small numbers of households experiencing two and three or more incidents of motor vehicle theft in the 12 months prior to interview, these estimates are subject to high sampling error and as such have not been commented on (for further details refer to the Technical Note). Document Selection These documents will be presented in a new window.
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