About this study
The Offending Crime & Justice study, published June 2009,
examined offences, anti-social behaviour and drug use among young
people. It was a longitudinal survey in four annual waves (2003 to
2006) with people aged 10 to 25 in England and Wales. The
interviews also collected information on risk factors in the lives
of sample members.
You can read the
key findings here - the study found that young people commit a
high proportion of criminal offences (although some, while against
the law, are not serious and may not have been reported to the
police).
Potential policy impact
The survey shows that the onset of offending and anti-social
behaviour occurs several years before the age at which the rate of
offending peaks.
Measures to reduce offending by young people need to engage with
boys and girls when they are aged twelve or younger.
Method
In 2003, a large representative sample of people aged 10 to 65
was selected in households. Focused enumeration was used to boost
the number of young people in the sample.
The people aged 10 to 25 were re-interviewed in 2004 and the
sample was refreshed by screening additional addresses. The same
process was repeated in 2005 and 2006.
Those re-interviewed had agreed to be re-contacted during the
previous interview. Over 95% of those interviewed said they would
be happy to be re-contacted a year later. Of the 5,000 interviewed
in 2006, just over half had taken part in all four waves of the
survey.
Following the four waves (2003-2006), the longitutidal analyses
were published in 2009.
About the
interviews
Each year's interview lasted about an hour. The interviewer
administered half of this. For the other half, respondents entered
their answers directly on the computer.
For the details of offences, questions were read out to the
respondent, who used head-phones to listen. These measures were
intended to ensure the information was accurate.
Commissioning and conducting the
research
NatCen conducted the work jointly with BMRB Social Research. The
study was commissioned by the Home Office, as part of a series of
criminality surveys that were designed to increase knowledge of
crime from the perspective of offenders.
The purpose of the
OCJS
The main objectives included:
You can:
Of interest: