Thursday 21 August 2008

A nice middle grounded article written by an American...




While the below american author is actually still overstating the problem in my opinion , I think he finds a nice middle ground between the fluffy "South Africa is perfect" liberals and the ridiculous fearmongers. Certainly he doesn't take into account how much lower the murder rate is for middle classed people than for the extremely poor (it's 8/100 000). Not does he mention how the most affected regions for crime in the world don't even have anything resembling accurate statistics compared to South Africa (if any at all). Anyway...decide for yourself.

South African suburbs look an awful lot like Houston or Los Angeles. But one difference stands out to the American eye: the Dostoevskian lengths people go to for home security.

In upscale neighborhoods, motion-detector alarm systems and electric fences are de rigeur. And this is on top of high walls, barred windows, padlocked gates, the block watchman, and the instant response team.

One South African company is marketing both fibre-optic detection barriers and the fearsome “Star Walls Security Spikes System” to home consumers. (The website boasts these systems already protect U.S. nuclear sites.)

And every foreign visitor who sees this South African “architecture of fear” for the first time has the same question: how much of this is motivated by rational fear, and how much is paranoia?

When I first arrived in Johannesburg, I was incredibly jumpy. Virtually the only thing anyone had told me about the city was that it was incredibly dangerous, with skyrocketing crime rates. The murder capital of the world, many said.

It also didn’t help that just before coming here, Bob and I watched Tsotsi, a great South African movie about a Johannesburg gangster who hijacks a car and finds a baby in the back seat. Silver screen images of knifings and gunfights fresh in my mind, I was afraid to be outside a wall in the dark for even a few minutes.

Gradually I’ve developed a more realistic sense of safety here. I now know my way around the inner city pretty well, exercising the same street smarts I developed in Chicago. I know which neighborhoods are safe for hanging out until 2am, and which ones it’s better to leave before dusk. Apart from some minor vandalism, Bob and I haven’t had any first-hand experience with crime.

All this makes me think that the fear of street crime in Jo’burg is grossly exaggerated. But then, there are all these other things. Like the fact that both of the Canadian interns at CALS had run-ins with crime during their few months here (a mugging and two ATM scams). And that my fellow Fulbright scholar actually witnessed a robbery/murder when he was here a few years ago.

Anecdotal evidence being what it is, I decided to investigate this question more deliberately. I started with a fascinating book about crime in South Africa, People Who Have Stolen from Me, which I reviewed on the blog a while back.

That book is great for getting an impression of the landscape of crime in South Africa, characterized by massive income inequalities, rapid social change, police corruption, and a weak state. But it’s also based mostly on anecdotal evidence.

To get a more accurate picture, I turned to statistics.

First off, I quickly learned that you have to treat crime statistics with a great deal of caution. For certain crimes, such as rape and domestic violence, the official figures are notoriously unreliable, because of massive underreporting to the police. Canada, for instance, has the world’s second-highest rate of reported rapes; not because rape is especially common there, but because its criminal justice system is especially victim-friendly.

Official murder statistics, however, are considered relatively reliable. Because murder is a particularly serious crime that tends to leave behind indisputable evidence (a body), it almost always gets reported and counted. So this is the best indicator to use when trying to compare crime rates over time or between locations.

I was surprised to see how dramatically murder rates can vary over time. In 1985 there were 147 murders in Washington DC; a rate of 23/100,000 residents. By 1991 the figure was 482; a rate of 81/100,000. That’s almost a four-fold increase in the murder rate over only seven years. The rate is now back down to around 35/100,000.

So you can’t speak of a city or country’s crime rate as if it is something steady over time. Murder statistics — and presumably other varieties of crime as well — are actually very sensitive to things like improved policing, or DC’s mid-1980s crack epidemic.

Looking at the most reliable statistics, it turns out the post-apartheid government has been very good on crime. In 1995/1996, a total of 26,877 murders were reported to South African police. That number has fallen steadily to 18,793 in 2004/2005. This suggests a 30% reduction in crime during the first decade of democracy.

You wouldn’t know it to talk to the man on the street however. Despite the strong statistical evidence that crime is dramatically decreasing, most people believe it is rapidly rising since the end of apartheid. The BBC reports:

In the years following the transition to democracy in 1994, South Africa’s soaring crime rate earned it the reputation of the most dangerous country in the world outside of a war zone.

It’s true that South Africa has acquired that reputation since the end of apartheid. But it’s not true that soaring crime rates are to blame for the shift in public perception.

So what does explain this paradox? Two things.

First, the conventional wisdom is supported by an unsophisticated look at the data. The number of reported assaults, burglaries, and rapes has in fact been gradually increasing ever since the end of apartheid.

Crime experts explain that these figures suggest that better policing is “catching” more of the crime that happens, and higher public confidence in police is improving rates of reporting. But the statistical subtleties are lost on the mass media.

Second, people’s experience of crime trends since the end of apartheid depends on their race. Under apartheid, the government vigorously patrolled white neighborhoods, while black neighborhoods were more likely to be victimized by police than protected by them.

So it may be that white folks actually are less safe today than they were under apartheid, because they no longer enjoy the concentrated protection of crime-fighting efforts. This reflects a more general trend toward equalization in post-apartheid South Africa, which black citizens perceive as things getting better, but white citizens perceive as things getting worse.

I couldn’t find numbers to test the theory that white South Africans are more frequently victimized by crime today than they were under apartheid. But statistical evidence does show that fear of crime in South Africa is dramatically shaped by race.

One survey conducted in Pretoria found that black respondents were four times as likely to have been victims of crime as white respondents: 22% over a five-year period as opposed to 5%. This makes sense as race is still very closely tied with poverty in South Africa, and poverty correlates strongly with vulnerability to crime.

Despite the fact that white South Africans are less likely than blacks to become victims of crime, however, they are much more afraid of it. Another survey showed that only 35% of white South Africans say they feel “very safe” during the day, compared to 64% of black South Africans. Clearly there is a mismatch between objective exposure to crime risk and subjective feelings of safety.

This lends credence to the theory that white fear of crime is heavily influenced by racial paranoia. But paranoia is not the full extent of the story. South Africa’s crime rates really are objectively high compared to the rest of the world.

Despite recent progress, South Africa still stands out internationally for high crime rates. A 1998 report identified South Africa as the murder capital of the world, just beating out Colombia.

It’s a bit unfair that the label has stuck, though, because 1998 appears to be the only year South Africa has topped the list - and then just barely. That year the murder rate was 59/100,000; it is now closer to 40/100,000. South Africa is not the murder capital of the world; that honor goes to Colombia.

Still, third place is hardly a position to be proud of. South African crime rates are roughly ten times what you find in the United States, and roughly fifty times what you find in Great Britain, with its stricter regulation of firearms. And so it makes sense that South Africans with income to spare will spend more of it on home security than Americans or Brits.

But the dramatic improvements over the past decade make clear that frustration with post-apartheid government is misplaced. The conventional wisdom that crime has soared since the beginning of democracy is simply wrong. In housing, education and health, progress has indeed been painfully slow. On crime, however, it has actually been quite dramatic.

It just doesn’t feel that way to everyone.




Poached from here.

16 comments:

Anonymous said...

Crime experts are only "suggesting" that the higher crime figures are due to "better" policing & "catching" more of the crime. This is a big red flag. First of all: note that a "suggestion" is FAR FROM empirical evidence as it is just conjecture on the part of those doing the suggesting. Furthermore: the police are notorious for not catching criminals thus making the assertion of alleged "catching" a moot point. Crime has in fact increased as criminals now have had a much greater opportunity to commit crimes due to the lax regulations.

The Rooster said...

Bollocks Ron. When The evidence says black and you insist seeing upon white then frankly it's your prerogative to prove your sanity , not societies.

Anonymous said...

I discovered this blog by accident but I must say the perception of crime by South Africans of all colours is justified.What makes things worse is the admitance by the deputy minister in parliament this week that less than 50% of crime scenes are examined and the number of ( reported)crimes which are solved is less than 10%.

Anonymous said...

What happens after crime is beyond the point. You need to fix the causes of crime (poverty and lack of hope) ...it's too late to do anything after a crime has been commmited , so what's the point in even talking about that ? It doesn't bring back anyone if you catch the murderer or not , and for people willing to kill policing/death penalty is no deterent. the only deterent is them having something to live or risk. It's the responsibility of those of us who have to help those who have not....and not just in a flowery krmic sense...but in a very real . ofr our own sake sense.

Anonymous said...

it's too late to do anything after a crime has been commmited , so what's the point in even talking about that ? It doesn't bring back anyone if you catch the murderer or not
------------------------------
What? Perhaps catching the guy will stop the next murder he commits!

Dont make sad excuses for pathetic policing.

Also, I doubt that apartheid police terrorised black neighbourhoods, to make that claim, prove it first.

Besides where was the black policing, if white people werent "helping" them why did they not help themselves?

Stats lie, i dont trust them, i trust my own experiences more and those of people i know, the news is filled with death and corruption. Whether SA is 3rd most violent country or hundredth, what does it matter, the point is there is a massive criminal element that cannot be controlled!

Anonymous said...

yeah...perhaps. People bent up over revenge aren't seeing the big picture. Conservatives by definition fail to understand the complex dynamic involved in stimulating human behaviour. Liberals are equally guilty for entitling people to not take responsibility for their lives. The rational middle grounded person realises that you need to fix society from the ground up...you need to treat a disease by eradicating the cause , not mearly painting over the symptoms.

Anonymous said...

You are nothing but a drunkard - aren't you? Get help. Soon.

Anonymous said...

bash that strawman ...if that's what your arguments have resorted too.....well....shame.

Kerry said...

Perhaps one of reasons that whites are more afraid of crime is that violence and torture frequently accompanies it - a burglary when a family is at home is seldom just a burglary, people are tortured for information about the whereabouts of money or weapons. We were burgled last year, and were grateful that we weren't home when they came to clean us out. Get that - we were grateful that we were just burgled.
Having said that, I'm a South African through and through, I'm not going anywhere, because it's only if we stay here and try to fix things that this country is going to carry on to greatness.

Anonymous said...

Kerry , while there are a very few isolated incidents of torture and the likes , it's freakishly rare. The media blows up every isolated incident and gives us the impression this is the normal method of business , when we're actually talking about scum that even your average criminal would wash his hands of. I won't come out and defend this behaviour , as it's clearly sick , but let's remember that of all our murders every year (18 000) only 500 are part and parcel of housebreaking , hijackings and armed robbery. The rest are interpersonal disputes amongst the extremely poor and dysfunctional.

Good for you for investing in the future of our country though.

Kerry said...

Now if only the media would report things like you just have. Am still freaked out by the possibility of being one of the 500 you mention, but perhaps it's time we stopped focusing on crime so much, and looked at how our society works (or doesn't), and what South Africans do to those nearest and (not) dearest to them.

Anonymous said...

Trust me Kerry , that's what this site is about. For white South Africans to stop pulling the victim card and to encourage them to be part of south african society as a positive influence....or....to fuck off somewhere else and shut up about it. I really do respect your sentiments and opinions and your type are more than welcome here.

Anonymous said...

but let's remember that of all our murders every year (18 000) only 500 are part and parcel of housebreaking , hijackings and armed robbery. The rest are interpersonal disputes amongst the extremely poor and dysfunctional.

++++++++++++++++

Dude - you really need to back statements like this up. Even if you just say "sucked this one out of my arse"

You might even end up getting a comment or 2 on your bullshit blog.

The Rooster said...

Anon , that number is verified by both the South African police and it;s international watchdogs. If you're such a paranoid mess that you can't trust any information except negative information , then you're a lost cause. It's easy to find this information for yourself if you are at all interested in finding it. But you're not are you ? You spend all day looking for the bad things about South Africa and then expect me to be surprised when you find some ? Any person doing this in any other country would be percieved as some kind of sicko....but in South Africa...my beloved insane country , you're seen as a "truth peddlar". More like a smut peddlar to me buddy.

Anonymous said...

The SA Police provide the figures?

Now I feel so much better.......

The Rooster said...

What would make you happy ? If more people were murdered ? Yes , that would wildly exite you wouldn't it ? The more the merrier ! Is there any end to your bloodlust ?