The Risks Of Photography

UK is violent crime capital of Europe
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/ukn...73/UK-is-violent-crime-capital-of-Europe.html
The most violent country in Europe: Britain is also worse than South Africa and U.S.



The most violent country in Europe
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/art...ry-Europe-Britain-worse-South-Africa-U-S.html


I have no objection to your feeling the UK is more violent than the USA or mainland Europe--I've lived in all three and spent a fair amount of time in drinking establishments in each, and my UK experience involved both angrier people and more events that actually came to blows (none involving me, fortunately). So my anecdotal experience actually backs you up.

However, with the statistics, I suggest you take any "most violent" declaration with a grain of salt. Comparing murder rates to murder rates (as some other comments have done, and the USA is worse than the UK) is usually an apples-to-apples comparison, and certainly is pretty valid between nations at similar levels of development. However, with combined crime statistics, once you add in other crimes, like assaults, robberies, even rape, you get wide variance in reporting, where things like culture and police effectiveness can greatly affect rates, something that can vary within a country or even between city neighborhoods. What I am suggesting is that comparing one nation to another on something like assaults might say much more about rates in reporting assault to police than the actual rate of assault.

Finally, I'll add that there are at least two ways, and perhaps more that I haven't heard of, crime statistics are compiled--some studies look at reported crimes to police, while others conduct surveys asking samples of the population if they have been victims of certain crimes. Both have flaws in determining the "true" crime rate, and you can probably imagine reasons for how the choice of study type might bias in favor of one country or another.
 
The UK must have the highest percentage of peadophiles of any developed country, we just don't get this constant child abduction here in Spain....
 
I don't think those figures do the country justice.

The problem with the UK is that you get places like Oxford (where I live) where absolutely nothing happens and places like Manchester where there is real and serious danger.

I lived in Manchester from '96 to 2001 and I might as well have been in Sarajevo at the time (no disrespect to anyone & anything), it was that bad.

Hmmmm...Oxford is actually where I was victim of the worst crime ever committed against me. Darn bike thieves!

But seriously, I do wonder if that has something to do with the perception of crime (besides the sensationalism of papers that is also being discussed). In most of the places I've lived in the USA, they were safe, low-crime cities or suburbs. Even if the neighboring city or the larger metro area had a couple hundred murders, they were always "somewhere else," generally concentrated in notorious neighborhoods, so the perception is of safety. Does anyone know if the UK crime rates are relatively dispersed, or are they concentrated in particular neighborhoods? I wonder if either country keeps national statistics on such a thing.

I would think people would feel less safe if crime seems to follow a less predictable pattern. As in, a murder between two drug dealers in a rough neighborhood doesn't shake the populace (at least those not living in the rough neighborhood) as much as a person shot while being mugged in a popular commercial district.
 
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