Abstract:
In 1993, the Council of Europe charged a Committee of Experts with
the preparation of a feasibility study concerning collection of crime and
criminal justice data for Europe. There were reservations regarding the
comparability of legal systems, offence definitions and data collection
procedures between different countries but it was recognised that,
despite similar problems (such as offence definitions and data collection
procedures which may vary between U.S. States as they do between
European countries), the American Sourcebook of Criminal Justice
Statistics provides information on all the U.S. States.
The members of the Council of Europe’s experts’ committee decided to
carry out a feasibility study by collecting data on offences and offenders
recorded by the police, prosecutions, convictions and corrections through
members of that Committee who had access to the data in 10 particular
countries. The report was received favourably and in 1995, the Council of
Europe decided to enlarge the Committee in order to include other parts
of Europe. The first official edition of the European Sourcebook of Crime
and Criminal Justice Statistics was published by the Council of Europe in
1999. It covered 36 countries and relied on national correspondents in
each country.
After the first edition, the Council of Europe was no longer able to sustain
the costs of the project. The UK Home Office, the Dutch Ministry of
Justice Research and Documentation Centre (WODC) and the Swiss
Department of Foreign Affairs (through the University of Lausanne)
appreciated the value of such a publication and a network of national
correspondents. Consequently, they agreed to share the financial
and other resource implications in order to produce a second edition.
A smaller Committee of Experts reviewed the first edition in an attempt
to improve the comparability of the figures wherever feasible. After
the publication of the second edition in late 2003, several contacts
were made in order to stabilize the project under a different umbrella.
It turned out, however, that a new formula could not be found within
reasonable time limits. In order to avoid that data become outdated, the
Committee decided to publish the present (third) edition, concentrating on updating trend data on offences and offenders known to the police as
well as convictions and corrections. For more detailed analyses, such as
sentencing patterns and alternative sanctions, the available resources did
not allow for updates on the information contained in the second edition.
For these – rather stable – areas, the reader will have to consult the second
edition or the European Sourcebook website. Finally, the website will
also contain information on errors in the second edition and raw data
including comments provided by our national correspondents.