Publication | Closed Access
DOES A DIFFERENCE MAKE A DIFFERENCE? COMPARING CROSS‐NATIONAL CRIME INDICATORS *
128
Citations
20
References
1990
Year
EngineeringCrime AnalysisEducationCriminal LawError FrameworkApplied MeasurementStatisticsDifference MakeReliabilityPublic PolicyCrime ForecastingSocial ImpactAggregate Point EstimationMultilevel ModelingComparative CriminologyWorld CrimeCriminal JusticeCross-sectional StudyCrime ScienceEconometricsSurvey Methodology
This study investigates the question of reliability among four widely used cross‐national data sets by constructing an error framework that relates types of errors to uses of the data. The findings indicate that (1) for nation‐by‐nation point estimation, the four data sets differ by varying degrees, (2) for aggregate point estimation in cross‐sectional descriptive and longitudinal descriptive studies, they are statistically similar, and (3) for analytic or explanatory cross‐sectional purposes, they yield statistically and substantively similar results. In short, for studies seeking aggregate descriptions of world crime or analytic explanations of cross‐national crime rates, differences in the data sets do not make a difference in the results.
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