Att anmäla våld

Recently violence and victims of violence in Sweden have been the object of massive societal attention and mobilisation. Crime statistics are often used rhetorically in the claims about the seriousness of the problem. The inherent weakness of such data is widely acknowledged among criminologists; th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Malin Åkerström
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: De Nordiske Kriminalistforeninger 1997-06-01
Series:Nordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/137434
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1841554477897744384
author Malin Åkerström
author_facet Malin Åkerström
author_sort Malin Åkerström
collection DOAJ
description Recently violence and victims of violence in Sweden have been the object of massive societal attention and mobilisation. Crime statistics are often used rhetorically in the claims about the seriousness of the problem. The inherent weakness of such data is widely acknowledged among criminologists; they rest on the practice of reporting events to a public agency. The variance in reporting is often explained in terms of either individual rational calculations by individuals (theft: insurance companies require that one report the stolen goods to the Police), or by general norms in society encouraging or inhibiting reporting practices (sexual harassment, rape etc. are often exemplifying a changing moral code reflected in an increased practice of reporting). Here a different theme is explored: the tendency to report as mirroring different local cultures. The societal attention towards violence gave rise to different subcategories; one was violence at work. In a study of violence against hospital staff official studies portrayed mental hospital staff to be most at risk. A survey revealed however that nurses at homes for elderly were as likely to become involved in violent interaction. Qualitative interviews suggested that reporting was encouraged in mental hospitals, while this was not so for staff working with the old. Moreover, staff involved with the elderly hesitated to label physical aggressive events as 'violence' even if they became severely injured.
format Article
id doaj-art-5fbfe88bdafa48278acaaba36278c508
institution Kabale University
issn 2446-3051
language Danish
publishDate 1997-06-01
publisher De Nordiske Kriminalistforeninger
record_format Article
series Nordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab
spelling doaj-art-5fbfe88bdafa48278acaaba36278c5082025-01-08T13:36:06ZdanDe Nordiske KriminalistforeningerNordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab2446-30511997-06-0184212513210.7146/ntfk.v84i2.137434130898Att anmäla våldMalin ÅkerströmRecently violence and victims of violence in Sweden have been the object of massive societal attention and mobilisation. Crime statistics are often used rhetorically in the claims about the seriousness of the problem. The inherent weakness of such data is widely acknowledged among criminologists; they rest on the practice of reporting events to a public agency. The variance in reporting is often explained in terms of either individual rational calculations by individuals (theft: insurance companies require that one report the stolen goods to the Police), or by general norms in society encouraging or inhibiting reporting practices (sexual harassment, rape etc. are often exemplifying a changing moral code reflected in an increased practice of reporting). Here a different theme is explored: the tendency to report as mirroring different local cultures. The societal attention towards violence gave rise to different subcategories; one was violence at work. In a study of violence against hospital staff official studies portrayed mental hospital staff to be most at risk. A survey revealed however that nurses at homes for elderly were as likely to become involved in violent interaction. Qualitative interviews suggested that reporting was encouraged in mental hospitals, while this was not so for staff working with the old. Moreover, staff involved with the elderly hesitated to label physical aggressive events as 'violence' even if they became severely injured.https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/137434våld
spellingShingle Malin Åkerström
Att anmäla våld
Nordisk Tidsskrift for Kriminalvidenskab
våld
title Att anmäla våld
title_full Att anmäla våld
title_fullStr Att anmäla våld
title_full_unstemmed Att anmäla våld
title_short Att anmäla våld
title_sort att anmala vald
topic våld
url https://tidsskrift.dk/NTfK/article/view/137434
work_keys_str_mv AT malinakerstrom attanmalavald