In victimology, fear of crime is understood as an emotional response to the perceived threat of crime. Fear of crime has been found to be affected by several variables besides local crime rates and personal experiences with victimization. This study examines the relationship between religion and fear of crime, an underexplored topic in the criminological literature. This gap is rather surprising given the central role religion has been found to play in shaping the attitudes and perceptions of congregants. In particular, religion has been found to foster generalized trust, which should engender lower levels of distrust or misanthropy, including that which is directed towards a general fear of crime. OLS regression was performed using data from the West Georgia Area Survey (n = 380). Controlling for demographic, community involvement, and political ideology variables, frequency of religious attendance was significantly and negatively associated with fear of property crime. This relationship remained even after a perceived neighborhood safety variable was introduced to the model. However, religious attendance was not significantly related to fear of violent crime, and religious orientation was unrelated to fear of property and violent crime. These results suggest that religious involvement conditionally reduces fear of crime, and the authors recommend that future research explore relationships between religion and fear of crime.
References
[1]
R.L. Akers. “Religion and crime.” Criminologist?35?(2010): 1–6.
[2]
C.J. Baier, and B.R.E. Wright. ““If you love me, keep my commandments”: A meta-analysis of the effect of religion on crime.” J. Res. Crime Delinq.?38?(2001): 3–21, doi:10.1177/0022427801038001001.
[3]
K.F. Ferraro. Fear of Crime: Interpreting Victimization Risk. Albany, NY, USA: State University of New York Press, 1995, p. 4.
[4]
U. Gabriel, and W. Greve. “The psychology of fear of crime: Conceptual and methodological perspectives.” Br. J. Criminol.?43?(2003): 600–614.
[5]
K.F. Ferraro. Fear of Crime: Interpreting Victimization Risk. Albany, NY, USA: State University of New York Press, 1995.
[6]
E. Gray, J. Jackson, and S. Farrall. “Reassessing the fear of crime.” Eur. J. Criminol.?5?(2008): 363–380, doi:10.1177/1477370808090834.
[7]
J.S. Zhao, B. Lawton, and D. Longmire. “An examination of the micro-level crime—fear of crime link.” Crime Delinq.?20?(2010): 1–26.
[8]
M. Weinrath, K. Clarke, and D.R. Forde. “Trends in fear of crime in a western Canadian City: 1984, 1994, and 2004.” Can. J. Criminol. Crim. Justice?49?(2007): 617–646, doi:10.3138/cjccj.49.5.617.
[9]
R. McCrea, T. Shyy, J. Western, and R.J. Stimson. “Fear of crime in Brisbane: Individual, social, and neighbourhood factors in perspective.” J. Sociol.?41?(2005): 7–27, doi:10.1177/1440783305048381.
[10]
G.R. Newman, and C. Trilling. “Public perceptions of criminal behavior: A review of the literature.” Crim. Justice Behav.?2?(1975): 217–236, doi:10.1177/009385487500200303.
[11]
N.T. Ammerman. Congregation and Community. New Brunswick, NJ, USA: Rutgers University Press, 1996.
[12]
N.T. Ammerman. “1996 Presidential Address: Organized Religion in a Voluntaristic Society.” Soc. Relig.?58?(1997): 203–215, doi:10.2307/3712213.
[13]
N.T. Ammerman. Pillars of Faith: American Congregations and Their Partners. Berkeley, CA, USA: University of California Press, 2005.
[14]
K. Beyerlein, and J. Hipp. “From Pews to Participation: The Effect of Congregation Activity and Context on Bridging Civic Engagement.” Soc. Probl.?53?(2006): 97–117, doi:10.1525/sp.2006.53.1.97.
[15]
J.Z. Park, and C. Smith. “‘To Whom Much Has Been Given…’: Religious Capital and Community Voluntarism among Churchgoing Protestants.” J. Sci. Study Relig.?39?(2000): 272–286, doi:10.1111/0021-8294.00023.
[16]
E.B. Uslaner. The Moral Foundations of Trust. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2002.
[17]
E.B. Uslaner. “Religion and Civic Engagement in Canada and the United States.” J. Sci. Study Relig.?41?(2002): 239–254, doi:10.1111/1468-5906.00114.
[18]
M. Welch, D. Sikkink, and M.T. Loveland. “The Radius of Trust: Religion, Social Embeddedness and Trust in Strangers.” Soc. Forces?86?(2007): 23–46, doi:10.1353/sof.2007.0116.
N. Luhmann. “Familiarity, Confidence, Trust: Problems and Alternatives.” In Trust. Edited by D. Gambetta. Oxford, UK: Basil Blackwell, 1988, pp. 94–107.
[21]
T. Yamagishi, and M. Yamagishi. “Trust and Commitment in the United States and Japan.” Motiv. Emot.?18?(1994): 129–166, doi:10.1007/BF02249397.
[22]
R. Lotz. “Public anxiety about crime.” Pac. Social. Rev.?22?(1979): 241–254, doi:10.2307/1388881.
[23]
D. O'Mahony, and K. Quinn. “Fear of crime and locale: The impact of community related factors upon fear of crime.” Int. Rev. Vict.?6?(1999): 231–251, doi:10.1177/026975809900600305.
[24]
V.F. Sacco, and M.R. Nakhaie. “Coping with crime: An examination of elderly and nonelderly adaptations.” Int. J. Law Psychiatr.?24?(2001): 305–323, doi:10.1016/S0160-2527(00)00074-1.
[25]
A. Mohammed, G. Saridakis, and S. Sookram. “Do victims of crime fear more crime? Empirical evidence from the Survey of Living Conditions (2005) of Trinidad and Tobago.” In SALISES Publications: Working Papers 19. Trinidad and Tobago: University of West Indies, 2009.
[26]
K.F. Ferraro. “Women's fear of crime: Shadow of sexual assault?” Soc. Forces?75?(1996): 667–690.
[27]
B.S. Fisher, and J.J. Sloan. “Unraveling the fear of victimization among college women: Is the “shadow of sexual assault hypothesis” supported?” Just. Q.?20?(2003): 633–660, doi:10.1080/07418820300095641.
[28]
L.W. Reid, and M. Konrad. “The gender gap in fear: Assessing the interactive effects of gender and perceived risk on fear of crime.” Soc. Spectrum?24?(2004): 399–425, doi:10.1080/02732170490431331.
[29]
J.A. Schafer, B.M. Huebner, and T.S. Bynum. “Fear of crime and criminal victimization: Gender-based contrasts.” J. Crim. Just.?34?(2006): 285–301, doi:10.1016/j.jcrimjus.2006.03.003.
[30]
R.M. Sutton, and S. Farrall. “Gender, socially desirable responding, and the fear of crime.” Br. J. Criminol.?45?(2005): 212–224.
[31]
J. Jackson, and E. Gray. “Functional fear and public insecurities about crime.” Br. J. Criminol.?50?(2010): 1–22, doi:10.1093/bjc/azp059.
[32]
S. Walkate. “Crime and community: Fear or trust?” Br. J. Sociol.?49?(1998): 550–569, doi:10.2307/591288.
[33]
J.B. Robinson, B.A. Lawton, R.B. Taylor, and D.D. Perkins. “Multilevel longitudinal impacts of incivilities: Fear of crime, expected safety, and block satisfaction.” J. Quant. Criminol.?19?(2003): 237–274, doi:10.1023/A:1024956925170.
[34]
L.M. Hempel, and J.B. Bartkowski. “Scripture, Sin and Salvation: Theological Conservatism Reconsidered.” Soc. Forces?86?(2008): 1647–1674, doi:10.1353/sof.0.0055.
[35]
J.B. Bartkowski, and L.M. Hempel. “Sex and gender traditionalism among conservative Protestants: Does the difference make a difference?” J. Sci. Stud. Relig.?41?(2009): 805–816.
[36]
J. Nooney, and E. Woodrum. “Religious coping and church-based social support as predictors of mental health outcomes: Testing a conceptual model.” J. Sci. Stud. Relig.?41?(2002): 359–368, doi:10.1111/1468-5906.00122.
[37]
J. van Olphen, A. Shulz, B. Israel, L. Chatters, L. Klem, E. Parker, and D. Williams. “Religious involvement, social support, and health among African-American women on the east side of Detroit.” J. Gen. Intern. Med.,?2003, 549–557.