MyData:What Is MyData? | Login/Account Info | Download Saved Files | Logout Description & Citation--Study No. 2729 | | | ICPSR Study No.: | 2729 |
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Persistent URL:
| http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR02729 |
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| | | Title: | Changing Patterns of Homicide and Social Policy in Philadelphia, Phoenix, and St. Louis, 1980-1994 |
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| | | Principal Investigator(s): | Margaret A. Zahn, North Carolina State University, University of North Carolina at Charlotte |
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| | | Funding Agency: | United States Department of Justice. National Institute of Justice. |
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| | | Grant Number: | 95-IJ-CX-0115 |
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| | | Bibliographic Citation: | Zahn, Margaret A. CHANGING PATTERNS OF HOMICIDE AND SOCIAL POLICY IN PHILADELPHIA, PHOENIX, AND ST. LOUIS, 1980-1994 [Computer file]. ICPSR version. Raleigh, NC: North Carolina State University [producer], 1997. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 1999. doi:10.3886/ICPSR02729 |
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| | | | Summary: | This study sought to assess changes in the volume and types
of homicide committed in Philadelphia, Phoenix, and St. Louis from
1980 to 1994 and to document the nature of those changes. Three of the
eight cities originally studied by Margaret Zahn and Marc Riedel
(NATURE AND PATTERNS OF HOMICIDE IN EIGHT AMERICAN CITIES, 1978 [ICPSR
8936]) were revisited for this data collection. In each city, police
records were coded for each case of homicide occurring in the city
each year from 1980 to 1994. Homicide data for St. Louis were provided
by the St. Louis Homicide Project with Scott Decker and Richard
Rosenfeld as the principal investigators. Variables describing the
event cover study site, year of the case, date and time of assault,
location of fatal injury, method used to kill the victim, and
circumstances surrounding the death. Variables pertaining to offenders
include total number of homicide and assault victims, number of
offenders arrested, number of offenders identified, and disposition of
event for offenders. Variables on victims focus on whether the victim
was killed at work, if the victim was using drugs or alcohol, the
victim's blood alcohol level, and the relationship of the victim to
the offender. Demographic variables include age, sex, race, and
marital status of victims and offenders. |
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| | | Subject Term(s): | crime patterns, crime trends, homicide, offenders, police records, victims |
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| | | Geographic Coverage: | Arizona, Missouri, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Phoenix, St. Louis, United States |
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| | | Time Period: | 1980 - 1994 |
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| | | Date(s) of Collection: | 1995 - 1998 |
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| | | Unit of Observation: | Individuals. |
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| | | Universe: | Homicide cases in Philadelphia, Phoenix, and St. Louis
during 1980-1994. |
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| | | Data Type: | administrative records data |
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| | | Data Collection Notes: | (1) For Part 1, Philadelphia Data, face sheets were
used in 1981, 1982, 1984, 1986, 1988, 1989, 1991, and 1993 as opposed
to full case files. For these years, some variables have an excessive
amount of missing data. Users should exercise caution when analyzing
the data for those years, specifically with respect to victim-offender
relationship, circumstance, and drug or alcohol use by the victim. (2)
Data on alcohol and drug use by victims are not available for
St. Louis. (3) Users of Part 2, St. Louis Data, must acknowledge that
the data were supplied to this project by the St. Louis Homicide
Project. (4) A user guide and a codebook are provided as a Portable
Document Format (PDF) file. The PDF file format was developed by Adobe
Systems Incorporated and can be accessed using PDF reader software,
such as the Adobe Acrobat Reader. Information on how to obtain a copy
of the Acrobat Reader is provided through the ICPSR Website on the
Internet. |
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| | | | Purpose of the Study: | Although homicide rates declined in many cities
in the late 1990s, the rate of homicide in cities with populations
over 250,000 increased significantly during the 1980s. In addition,
there were major changes in the characteristics of homicide. The most
striking changes involved the increase in homicide victimization and
offending among young males, especially those 18 and under. At the
same time, research on homicide has pointed to, but not fully
documented, the importance of community characteristics in relation to
changing levels of violence. Theoretical advances have suggested that
it is important to locate events in their cultural context and to
examine changes in context and the resulting patterns of violence. The
researchers undertook a multiple-city study of homicide rather than a
single-city study to allow for better generalizability regarding
patterns of homicide and circumstances that trigger changes in
patterns. Further, by examining the problem from an individual,
case-level perspective, the study sought to assess changes in volume
and types of homicide over time and to document the nature of those
changes. |
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| | | Study Design: | In an earlier study by Margaret Zahn and Marc
Riedel (NATURE AND PATTERNS OF HOMICIDE IN EIGHT AMERICAN CITIES, 1978
[ICPSR 8936]), data were collected on homicide in eight cities
representing the four regions of the United States. These sites had
representative overall patterns of homicide for large cities in their
regions. Initially, this study was to return to four of the eight
cities, with one city again representing each region: Philadelphia in
the Northeast, St.Louis in the Midwest, Dallas in the South, and
Phoenix in the West. However, Dallas was dropped and only three of the
original eight cities were retained because (1) the researchers had
maintained contact with personnel in Philadelphia, Phoenix, and
St. Louis, which facilitated securing the data from those sources, (2)
these cities had witnessed substantial increases in the homicide rate,
and each had demonstrated changes in patterns of the victim-offender
relationship, as measured by the limited Uniform Crime Report data,
and (3) cost prohibited research in more sites. In each city, police
records were coded for each case of homicide occurring in the city
each year from 1980 to 1994. Collecting information on all homicide
events rather than sampling cases had two major advantages. First,
sampling could produce inadvertent biases in types of cases and/or too
few cases of a particular type for analysis purposes. Second, analysis
of the universe of cases in each site enabled direct comparability
with databases that were collected under other auspices and included
all cases over multiple years. |
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| | | Data Source: | homicide records from Philadelphia, Phoenix, and St. Louis
police departments |
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| | | Description of Variables: | Selected variables salient to understanding
homicide were measured in order to examine changes in the nature of
homicide in urban areas. Variables describing the event cover study
site, year of the case, date and time of assault, location of fatal
injury, method used to kill the victim, and circumstances surrounding
the death. Variables pertaining to offenders include total number of
homicide and assault victims, number of offenders arrested, number of
offenders identified, and disposition of event for
offenders. Variables on victims focus on whether the victim was killed
at work, if the victim was using drugs or alcohol, the victim's blood
alcohol level, and the relationship of the victim to the
offender. Demographic variables include age, sex, race, and marital
status of victims and offenders. |
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| | | Response Rates: | Not applicable. |
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| | | Presence of Common Scales: | None. |
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| | | | Note: | A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the
summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the
file manifest. |
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| | | Original ICPSR Release: | 1999-12-29 |
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| | | Version History: | The last update of this study occurred on 2006-03-30. |
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| 2006-03-30 - File CB2729.ALL.PDF was removed from any previous datasets and flagged as a study-level file, so that it will accompany all downloads. |
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| 2005-11-04 - On 2005-03-14 new files were added to one
or more datasets. These files included additional setup files as well
as one or more of the following: SAS program, SAS transport, SPSS portable,
and Stata system files. The metadata record was revised 2005-11-04 to
reflect these additions. |
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| | | Dataset(s): | - DS1: Philadelphia Data
- DS2: Phoenix Data
- DS3: St. Louis Data
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