RT Book RT Statistics T1 Scottish crime and justice survey, 2010-211 T2 Scottish Crime and Justice Survey LA English PP Colchester PB UK Data Service YR 2013 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1873023790 AB The Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS) is a social survey which asks people about their experiences and perceptions of crime in Scotland. The survey is an important resource for both the government and public of Scotland. Respondents are selected at random from the Postal Address File and participation in the survey is entirely voluntary. The main aims of the SCJS are to: provide reliable statistics on people's experience of crime in Scotland, including services provided to victims of crime, assess the varying risk of crime for different groups of people in the population, examine trends in the level and nature of crime in Scotland over time, collect information about people's experiences of, and attitudes on a range of crime and justice related issues. An important role of the SCJS is to provide an alternative and complementary measure of crime to police recorded crime statistics. For further details of the scope and methodology of the SCJS, please see documentation. Information about the survey and links to publications may be found on the Scottish Government's Scottish Crime and Justice Survey webpages. K1 administration of justice K1 Adults K1 advice K1 Age K1 aggressiveness K1 Alcohol use K1 Alcoholism K1 amphetamines K1 antisocial behaviour K1 Anxiety K1 Arrest K1 Assault K1 assistance alarm systems K1 Attitudes K1 bicycles K1 Bullying K1 Burglary K1 cameras K1 Cannabis K1 care standards K1 child behaviour K1 Children K1 Civil Law K1 Cocaine K1 Communities K1 community service (punishment) K1 computer security K1 Conflict Resolution K1 Costs K1 Courts K1 credit card use K1 crime and security K1 Crime Prevention K1 crime victims K1 criminal damage K1 Criminal Investigation K1 CRIMINAL justice system K1 Criminals K1 Cultural Identity K1 debilitative illness K1 Detention K1 Disabilities K1 domestic responsibilities K1 Domestic Violence K1 driving K1 Drug Abuse K1 drug addiciton K1 Drug trafficking K1 Drug use K1 economic value K1 ecstasy (drug) K1 EDUCATIONAL background K1 Educational standards K1 emotional states K1 Employment K1 Ethnic conflict K1 ethnic groups K1 Everyday Life K1 Evidence K1 Families K1 family members K1 Fear K1 Fear of crime K1 financial compensation K1 financial resources K1 Fines K1 Fraud K1 Friends K1 full-time employment K1 garages K1 Gender K1 Guns K1 Harassment K1 Health K1 Health services K1 health status K1 Heroin K1 home ownership K1 Households K1 Housing K1 housing tenure K1 human behaviour K1 Income K1 Injuries K1 Insurance K1 insurance claims K1 Interpersonal Conflict K1 Interpersonal Relations K1 intruder alarm systems K1 judgments (law) K1 Juvenile Delinquency K1 landlords K1 legal procedure K1 life styles K1 Lighting K1 Location K1 locks K1 LSD (drug) K1 Marital Status K1 Medical care K1 Mental Disorders K1 Money K1 motor vehicles K1 newspaper readership K1 offences K1 offensive telephone calls K1 Organizations K1 Parental supervision K1 part-time employment K1 Performance K1 personal safety K1 place of residence K1 Police officers K1 police services K1 Policing K1 prison sentences K1 Prison System K1 Probation K1 prosecution service K1 psychological effects K1 public information K1 Public transport K1 Quality of life K1 Racial Discrimination K1 Refuse K1 rehabilitation (medical) K1 relisgious affiliation K1 Risk K1 Road safety K1 Robbery K1 Satisfaction K1 security systems K1 Sexual Abuse K1 Sexual Assault K1 Sexual Harassment K1 Sexual offences K1 Sexuality K1 sheltered housing K1 Smoking K1 social housing K1 Social Support K1 socio-economic status K1 solvent abuse K1 Spouses K1 Stalking K1 telephones K1 Theft K1 theft protection K1 traffic offences K1 tranquillizers K1 Unemployment K1 vagrants K1 voluntary welfare organizations K1 Weapons K1 Workplace K1 Youth K1 Statistik : 2010-2011 : Schottland DO 10.5255/UKDA-SN-7229-1