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The way people view crime depends on the politics of when they were growing up, study reveals

A new study led by the University of Sheffield indicates that the different political periods in which people ‘came of age’ has an important influence on their perception of crime, even decades later.


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The pronouncements that leading politicians make about crime can have a lasting impact on the crime fears of young adults. Professor Stephen Farrall

  • Study shows a strong relationship between a person’s current crime fears and their political generation
  • People who grew up under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher or John Major expressed the greatest fear about domestic burglary – the same generation that witnessed a dramatic rise in property crime during the 1980s
  • Those who grew up during the governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown reported the highest level of concern about local problems including vandalism, teenagers loitering and noisy neighbours


For more than 40 years, researchers have sought to understand the causes and implications of people’s fear of crime. But to date, no studies have been able to take into account whether the political period in which a cohort grew up had a meaningful effect on their emotional responses to crime. The political context that the respondents grew up in - during the ages of 15 to 25 - is the time when people form key opinions and are most sensitive to social events.

Researchers from the University of Sheffield’s School of Law, with colleagues from the University of Southampton and Sciences Po, Paris, analysed data on fear of crime and antisocial behavior from the British Crime Survey in England and Wales spanning 30 years.

In doing so, they were able to estimate the net effects of individual aging, the historical period in which the survey was conducted and the political generations the respondents belonged to.

The researchers found a strong relationship between a respondent’s current crime fears and their political generation. For example, those who grew up under the leadership of Margaret Thatcher (1979-1990) or John Major (1990-1997) expressed the greatest level of worry about domestic burglary – the same generation who witnessed a dramatic rise in property crime during the 1980s.

Meanwhile, the Wilson/Callaghan (1974–1979) generation expressed the highest levels of worry about robbery and mugging, which was a key concern for politicians, policy makers and journalists at the time.

Responses to antisocial behaviours tell a similar story. People who grew up during the Blair and Brown governments (from the late 1990s to 2010), reported the highest level of concern about local problems, such as vandalism, teenagers loitering, and noisy neighbours; such problems were heavily emphasised and legislated against during this political period.

Overall, the study shows that citizens have a greater propensity to fear the crimes that were the focus of political debate during their youth and this effect persists into adulthood. The results reveal that crime fears can linger, and that the processes by which people form their political values can cast a long-term influence on their attitude about crime.

Professor Stephen Farrall, from the University of Sheffield’s School of Law, said: “The pronouncements that leading politicians make about crime can have a lasting impact on the crime fears of young adults. Political and popular debates about crime that are prevalent in one’s youth appear to impact the fears those individuals report through adulthood and into middle age.”

He added: “In this respect, our narratives of crime and disorder tell us something important about the enduring influence of our political history and the stories we hear about crime.”

The British Journal of Criminology paper, Political Socialisation, Worry about Crime and Antisocial Behaviour: An Analysis of Age, Period and Cohort Effects has been published by Oxford University Press today (7 August 2018).

The study forms part of a project examining the long-term effects of Thatcherism on crime by the University of Sheffield’s School of Law, conducted with colleagues at the University of Southampton and Sciences Po, Paris. The research was funded by the UK’s Economic and Social Research Council.

The University of Sheffield’s School of Law is a community that thrives on mutual respect, encouragement and commitment to excellence in the student experience, teaching and research. Its teaching is informed by its world-class research in law and criminal justice.

The University of Sheffield

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A member of the UK’s prestigious Russell Group of leading research-led institutions, Sheffield offers world-class teaching and research excellence across a wide range of disciplines.

Unified by the power of discovery and understanding, staff and students at the university are committed to finding new ways to transform the world we live in.

Sheffield is the only university to feature in The Sunday Times 100 Best Not-For-Profit Organisations to Work For 2018 and for the last eight years has been ranked in the top five UK universities for Student Satisfaction by Times Higher Education.

Sheffield has six Nobel Prize winners among former staff and students and its alumni go on to hold positions of great responsibility and influence all over the world, making significant contributions in their chosen fields.

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