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18 Eur. J. on Crim. Pol'y & Rsch. 1 (2012)

handle is hein.journals/eurjcpr18 and id is 1 raw text is: Eur J Crim Policy Res (2012) 18:1-3
DOI 10.1007/s10610-011-9169-4
Editor Introduction
Jirg-Martin Jehle
Published online: 8 January 2012
O The Author(s) 2012. This article is published with open access at Springerlink.com
Since the beginnings of criminal statistics in the early nineteenth century their use as
instruments for measuring the amount of crime has been controversial. Nevertheless, they
are still important to the present day. These data are used to justify policies, to decide on
measures of crime prevention and control and to make statements about the performance of
the criminal justice system. Despite all methodological doubts, these figures are still referred
to in criminology, as there are no real alternatives to them. Even crime or victim surveys
originally intended to replace recorded crime statistics can only complement them. Therefore
it is important to tackle and attempt to solve all those methodological problems that have
emerged since the days of Quetelet and other pioneers in the field of criminal statistics.
If these observations are already true for every national situation to which criminal
statistics are normally related they are all the more valid when one tries to compare statistical
figures produced in different countries. Criticisms that comparisons across jurisdictions are
virtually impossible or at least misleading given the many differences in legal definitions,
reporting and recording practices are as old as the earliest writings of Quetelet in compar-
ative criminology. The difficulties to overcome these problems may have led to the fact that
international comparative data in criminal justice are relatively scarce compared to other
fields of public interest. However, there are now signs that an upturn of international
research in criminology is taking place. In view of an increasingly interlinked world and
an ever converging Europe, not only are economic and social comparisons needed, but it is
also necessary to compare the development of crime figures as well as criminal policies and
criminal justice systems.
The European Sourcebook of Crime and Criminal Justice Statistics is a prominent
example of such efforts to collect and evaluate national data on all levels of the criminal
justice chain and to bring them together in a European comparative perspective. In contrast
to other data collections, it has established a common understanding of concepts, furthered
comparability by using standard definitions for crime types and penal measures or at least
improved the evaluation by demonstrating the deviations across jurisdictions. The various
J.-M. Jehle (E)
Institute of Criminal Law and Justice, University of Gdttingen, Platz der Gdttinger Sieben 6, 37073
Goettingen, Germany
e-mail: jjehle@jura.uni-goettingen.de

4Z Springer

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