Foreword
Contributors
Introduction
John A. Eterno, Arvind Verma, and Eli B. Silverman
Chapter 1: Collecting Police-Recorded Data in Austria: A Review of the Current State of Play
Stefanie Meyer
Chapter 2: How France Counts Crime: A Shared Interest in Bad Accounts
Christian Mouhanna
Chapter 3: Counting Crime in the Isle of Spice: A Review of the Royal Grenada Police Force
Christine Sharon Barrow
Chapter 4: Counting Crime: An Exercise in Police Discretion Report from India
Arvind Verma and Asim Arun
Chapter 5: Role of Police in the Compilation of Crime Data in Mexico
Elena Azaola and Cliff Roberson
Chapter 6: Crime Statistics: To Measure Is to Know, but Do More with Less
Peter Versteegh and Rene Hesseling
Chapter 7: The Challenges of Police Discretion and Crime Statistics in Nigeria
Abdulrahman Dambazau
Chapter 8: How Portugal Counts Crime: An Exercise in Police Discretion
Goncalo de Melo Bandeira and Paulo Teixeira
Chapter 9: The State and Trends of Crime in Modern Russia
Yakov Gilinskiy
Chapter 10: Counting Crime in South Africa
Gareth Newham
Chapter 11: Police Data in Spain: Still a Grey Landscape
Francesc Guillen Lasierra and Santiago Herrero Blanco
Chapter 12: Crime Reporting in Sweden
Stefan Holgersson
Chapter 13: Measuring Crime and Victimization Rates in Tanzania
Simeon P. Sungi
Chapter 14: A Web of Deceit: Police Crime Statistics of England and Wales
Rodger Patrick
Chapter 15: Crime Reporting in the United States: Truth or Consequences
John A. Eterno and Eli B. Silverman
Index