Reporting assaults against juveniles to the police: Barriers and catalysts
Abstract
Abstract
Reporting crimes to the police is a two-stage process. Victims and families first recognize whether a crime has occurred and, if so, are influenced by a variety of considerations in deciding whether to report it. In a national sample of physical and sexual assaults against juveniles, recognition of the assault as a crime was more likely for episodes involving adolescent (vs preadolescent) victims, adult and multiple offenders, physical injuries, female victims, and when families had prior experiences with police. Among families who recognized the episode as a crime, actual reporting to police was more likely when the perpetrator was an adult, the family had been advised to report, the family had prior experience with the police, the family believed the police would take the episode seriously, and when the child was believed still to be in danger from the perpetrator. Reporting was less likely for assaults that occurred at school.
Department
Sociology
Publication Date
2-2003
Journal Title
Journal of Interpersonal Violence
Publisher
Sage Publications
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
10.1177/0886260502238730
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Finkelhor, D., Wolak, J. Reporting assaults against juveniles to the police: Barriers and catalysts. (2003) Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 18 (2), pp. 103-128.