AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the differences between police reports of child victimization and the data from the Finnish Child Victim Survey (FCVS) to understand underreporting of violence.
  • It analyzes 242 police reports involving 12-year-old victims of physical violence, focusing on the types of violence reported versus unreported.
  • Key findings show notable discrepancies based on the victim's gender, the relationship to the suspect, and the assault's location, revealing that violence against girls by mothers is underreported compared to violence against boys by men.

Article Abstract

This study examines the reporting and not reporting of child victimization to the police. The study focuses on comparing the police reports of child victimization to the Finnish Child Victim Survey (FCVS) to find out the kind of violence that is reported to the police and the kind that is not. A total number of 242 police reports of 12-year-old victims of physical violence were collected from the Finnish Police Information System. These reports were compared to the 12-year-old children's victimization experiences in the FCVS. Discrepancies between these two data can be found in the victim's gender, the relationship between the victim and the suspect, and the location of the assault. Physical violence against girls committed by mothers is not reported as often as physical violence against boys committed by men.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1891/0886-6708.26.2.257DOI Listing

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