Resources for Victim Service Providers - Statistics & Data
2014 Hate Crime Statistics - Victims
In the Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program, the victim of a hate crime may be an individual, a business, an institution, or society as a whole. In 2014, the nation’s law enforcement agencies reported that there were 6,727 victims of hate crimes. Of these victims, 46 were victimized in 17 separate multiple-bias incidents.
2014 Sexual Violence Research Review
This report is a summary and compendium of research on sexual violence from 2005-2014 mostly from the United States. California Coalition Against Sexual Assault, 2014.
Statistical Analysis Center Research Reports and Projects Related to Victim Services: 2012-2015 (2015)
Justice Research Statistics Association.
This annotated bibliography of statistical resources covers topics such as: domestic violence, human trafficking, prevalence of victimization, family violence, management of sex offenders, and crimes against children.
Crime Survivors Speak: A National Survey of Victims' Views on Safety and Justice (2016)
Alliance for Safety and Justice
Advancing safety and justice for crime victims involves holding individuals who commit crimes accountable, as well as stopping cycles of crime and repeat victimization. Victims also need pathways to recovery, including support to overcome the physical, emotional and financial consequences of crime. This survey sampled 3,165 people across the country, and, from that pool, identified and interviewed over 800 victims. Unless otherwise cited, the data contained in this report reflect findings from the survey and the responses of this broad cross section of crime survivors from around the country.
Building a National Data Collection on Victim Service Providers: A Pilot Test (2018)
This report describes the development of the National Census of Victim Service Providers (NCVSP), including the development of the national roster of entities potentially serving victims, the NCVSP data collection instrument, and the implementation and results of a pilot study conducted with 725 entities from the national roster. Results examine the feasibility of obtaining high response rates from different types of victim service providers (VSPs), experimental tests of different procedures for collecting data from VSPs, and the quality and nature of substantive information generated from the NCVSP instrument.