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The Cambridge Crime Harm Index: Measuring Total Harm from Crime Based on Sentencing Guidelines

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Repository DOI


Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Sherman, L 
Neyroud, PW 
Neyroud, Eleanor 

Abstract

The logic of simply summing crimes of all kind into a single total has long been challenged as misleading. All crimes are not created equal. Counting them as if they are fosters distortion of risk assessments, resource allocation, and accountability. To solve this problem, Sherman (2007, 2010, 2011 and 2013) has offered a general proposal to create a weighted 'Crime Harm Index (CHI).' This article provides and explicates a detailed procedure for operationalizing this idea in UK: what we call the 'Cambridge CHI.' The new elements of the Cambridge CHI presented here are (1) the use of the 'starting point' in the national Sentencing Guidelines to define the number of days in prison for each offence type; (2) the exclusion of proactively detected, previously unreported offences, and (3) a comparative analysis of the Cambridge and other approaches to weighting crime harm, judged by a three-pronged test of democracy, reliability, and cost.

Description

Keywords

4402 Criminology, 44 Human Society

Journal Title

Policing (Oxford): a journal of policy and practice

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1752-4512
1752-4520

Volume Title

10

Publisher

Oxford University Press