The International Classification of Crimes for Statistical Purposes (ICCS) Introduction

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The International Classification of Crimes for Statistical Purposes (ICCS) Introduction Michael Jandl Research Officer Data Development and Dissemination Unit UNODC

What is the ICCS? The ICCS is the first international classification of crime for statistical purposes and will have far-reaching implications for crime data collection at all levels It is a hierarchical classification, whose categories are mutually exclusive and comprehensive The ICCS is built on behavioural descriptions and not on legal code, hence it is applicable across jurisdictions The ICCS is also a tool to understand crime patterns and characteristics The implementation of the ICCS will improve data consistency within and between countries

Milestones of developing the ICCS 2009: joint UNODC/UNECE Task Force on crime classification set up by the Conference of European Statisticians (CES), which in 2012 produced the ICCF 2013: UNSC and CCPCJ endorsed the plan to develop a full crime classification for statistical purposes (part of Roadmap ) 2013-2014: three Expert Group Meetings and 2 rounds of testing of the ICCS among volunteer countries (77 countries + 10 int. organisations contributed) 2015: The ICCS was officially endorsed by the UN Stat. Commission in March 2015 and the UN Crime Commission in May 2015 2016: Translations; piloting the ICCS 2017: Awareness raising, virtual platform, technical assistance 2018: Implementation manual vol. I

Building the classification: the what and how? Primary unit of classification is the act or event which constitutes a criminal offence The description of criminal acts is based on behaviours/events, not on legal provisions Sometimes, contextual elements are also taken into account to define crimes: Target the main entity against which the act is directed (person, object, animal, state, communal value or concept) State of mind of perpetrator mens rea and motivation (e.g. intentional vs. nonintentional/ negligent) Modus operandi an act may be enabled by use of force, violence, intimidation, etc.

Principles for the ICCS Exhaustiveness events generally known to constitute offences in a significant number of countries Structure organised hierarchically, with manageable and balanced numbers of categories at successive levels ( ) ( ) Mutual exclusivity any crime assigned to one and only one category Description as precise as possible description of each criminal act and category

Advantages of the ICCS The ICCS - a definitional framework that groups and organizes criminal offences meaningfully and systematically - will allow to: o Build a comprehensive stat. framework on all criminal offences to facilitate analysis of crime o Improve comparability across countries and through time o Improve data consistency within countries:

Improve data consistency within countries across entities in federal states across data produced by successive stages of the criminal justice process across sources (admin. data and surveys)

Example of ICCS structure 3. Injurious Acts of a sexual nature Sexual violence Sexual exploitation Other injurious acts of a sexual nature Sexual assault Rape Other acts of Sexual violence Sexual exploitation adult Sexual exploitation children Other acts of sexual exploitation Rape with force Rape without force Statutory rape

The structure of the ICCS: Level 1

The ICCS detailed structure

Additional disaggregations Disaggregating variables: Event descriptions: situational context, motive, type of weapon, location, date/time, attempted/completed, Cybercrime related, etc. Victim descriptions: sex, age, age status, victim-perpetrator relationship, citizenship, legal status, intoxication, etc. Perpetrator descriptions: sex, age, age status, victim-perpetrator relationship, citizenship, legal status, intoxication, recidivist status, etc.

Additional disaggregations

Implementation challenges at national level 1. Awareness raising/advocacy 2. Coordination 3. Technical work Key issue: enhance quality of statistics for better policy making and monitoring

International support UNODC provides support for countries implementing the ICCS in 4 main areas: 1. Organisational and institutional framework: Technical Advisory Group (TAG) to lead ICCS implementation and maintenance (1 st meeting: May 2016) 2. Information campaign: reach-out to data producers and users (ongoing) 3. Methodological support: implementation manual under development + other technical documentation 4. Technical assistance: virtual platform among ICCS practitioners, technical assistance activities (projects in Africa, Latin America, Asia-Pacific)

Implementation Manual, Vol. I (under development) Annotated outline of Mapping national administrative crime statistics into the ICCS was produced in 2016; full manual will rely on the inputs from volunteer countries Part A: how to build correspondence tables/mapping crimes? Part B: how to use disaggregating variable to produce better crime data? Part C: Guidelines for classifying specific offences (examples) Annex 1: Implementation Roadmap: 10 concrete steps for ICCS implementation Annex 2: Case studies Annex 3: Model work plan for mapping classifications

Virtual platform on ICCS I Objective: support ICCS implementation Members on the platform can: Ask any question to UNODC and to other TAG Members; Get guidance from UNODC and from other TAG Members; Share documents and exchange their experiences; Advise UNODC on activities and methodological tools for ICCS implementation; Receive methodological tools developed by UNODC; Get information on UNODC activities.

As of 21 Nov 2017: 80 users From 50 countries/5 continents 8 countries from Asia Topics Questions & suggestions National documents Documents for review Roadmap for ICCS Implementation Boundaries of the ICCS Virtual platform on ICCS II Future topics Issues for ICCS review Announcement of new files for information

Implementation of the ICCS (int l activities) Implementation support for countries: Development of a Common Protocol on mapping procedures: Assessment protocol of crime statistic system Template for mapping procedures Technical assistance in drafting correspondence tables, through Q&A on virtual platform or regional/country mission; Volunteer countries for complete ICCS mapping; Case studies of developing complete ICCS correspondence tables; Peer review of another case study correspondence table (who would be interested in participating in this?)

Roadmap for ICCS implementation: 10 steps 1. Setting up institutional and organizational framework 2. Awareness raising 3. International coordination and support 4. Technical preparations 5. Assessment of current data production 6. Develop a national workplan 7. Implement your workplan 8. Produce outputs 9. Publish national crime data according to ICCS categories 10. Implementation report

Other challenges in using crime statistics Three main factors affect comparability and interpretability of crime statistics (i.e. what to account for when making sense of figures on crimes): Proportion of crime that is reported/detected The way crime is defined and classified The way crime is recorded and counted... and the ICCS?

Thank you for your attention https://www.unodc.org/unodc/en/data-and-analysis/statistics/iccs.html Contact: ICCS@unodc.org