RT Article T1 Crime Control Measures, Individual Liberties, and Crime Rates: An Assessment of 40 Countries JF International criminal justice review VO 27 IS 1 SP 5 OP 18 A1 Albanese, Jay S. 1953- LA English YR 2017 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1750949989 AB The balance between crime control methods and individual liberties is always problematic, creating tension, because in order to investigate crime, and adjudicate and punish offenders, it is necessary to make reasonable intrusions into the liberty of citizens. This study uses data from 40 countries to examine the crime control measures (police per capita and conviction rates) that reflect government investments in criminal justice apparatus to control crime and criminals, as well as the use of these crime control measures through government intervention in the lives of its citizens (formal citizen contacts with police, prosecution rate, and detention rate), to examine their impact on crime victimization rates (homicide rates and crimes included in the international crime victim survey). The purpose is to examine whether these government interventions have any impact on crime rates across countries, controlling other independent variables that might help to explain any observed relationships among these variables (such as measures of civil liberties, democracy, human development, available information and communications technologies, political rights, corruption perceptions, education, economic freedom, freedom of the press, and prosperity). K1 Comparative criminal justice K1 Crime Control K1 Crime rates K1 Homicide rates K1 social and political factors DO 10.1177/1057567716680401