
The Talking-up Scotland fund raiser closing on Friday, primarily to enable the recruitment of some research assistance, in order to take pressure off me [74 in June and tiring] and hopefully to further improve the blog, has made a good start. To contribute, only if you can (!) go to: Talking-up Scotland - a Politics crowdfunding project in Ayr by Professor John Robertson
By Professor John Robertson OBA, former Faculty Research Ethics Chair, UWS
From YouGov today, The most important issues facing the country, we can see, above, that 14% of Scots rate crime as one of the most important issues and over the last 15 years, the trend has fallen.

In Wales, after decades of Labour-rule, it sits at 20%, 43% higher.

In London, concerns about crime affect more than twice as many as in Scotland.

In the Rest of the South, of England, the issue is of concern to nearly 60% more.

In the Midlands, it worries 86% more.

Finally, in the North, 60% more make this major issue.
Why is this?
I’d be worried too.
How reliable are the Scottish data?
The above is one side of the triangulation suggestion that Scots are significantly less concerned with crime and that they are right to do so. Here’s the second, police recording:
Recorded sexual crimes decreased in the most recent year. Sexual crimes decreased by 3%, from 14,834 in the year ending June 2023 to 14,417 in the year ending June 2024.
The clear up rate for all recorded crimes was 54.1% in 2023-24, up from 53.3% in 2022-23. Crimes against society (91.4%), non-sexual crimes of violence (68%) and sexual crimes (57.2%) continued to have higher clear up rates in 2023-24 than crimes of dishonesty (33.1%) and damage and reckless behaviour (29.6%).
There were 61,934 incidents of domestic abuse recorded by the police in 2022-23, a decrease of 4% on 2021-22. In 2022-23, 39% of all incidents recorded by the police included the recording of at least one crime or offence.
Between 2020-21 and 2021-22, the number of crimes and offences in which a firearm was alleged to have been involved decreased by 23% (from 353 to 273 offences). The 2021-22 figure is the lowest recorded level since comparable records began in 1980.
How does all this compare with other parts of the UK?
In 2022/23, however, Scotland’s crime rate was the lowest in the UK, with the crime rate in England and Wales rising noticeably during the same period. Scotland’s homicide rate has also fallen, from being the highest in the UK in 2002/03, to the lowest as of 2022/23.
Here’s the third, what thousands of folk, scientifically sampled by University of Edinburgh researchers who could teach research methods and not by a bunch of journalist, doctors, nurses or GMB leaders who could not pass it.
The Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS), carried out by independent University-based researchers interviews around 5 000 Scots asking them to speak of ‘their experiences of, and attitudes to, a range of issues related to crime, policing and the justice system, including crime not reported to the police.‘
This is gold standard research and can be trusted to reveal the world as actually experienced by the wider population and as how the data suggests it is.
The survey update reveals:
Crime has fallen by 53% since 2008-09. Results from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS) show that around one in ten adults were victims of crime in 2021-22 (10.0%), down from 11.9% in 2019-20. This compares to one in five in 2008-09 (20.4%).
The SCJS showed the volume of violent crime fell by nearly three-fifths (58%) between 2008-09 and 2021-22.
Fact!
Sources: The above is one side of the triangulation suggestion that Scots are significantly less concerned with crime and that they are right to do so. Here’s the second, police recording:
Recorded sexual crimes decreased in the most recent year. Sexual crimes decreased by 3%, from 14,834 in the year ending June 2023 to 14,417 in the year ending June 2024.
The clear up rate for all recorded crimes was 54.1% in 2023-24, up from 53.3% in 2022-23. Crimes against society (91.4%), non-sexual crimes of violence (68%) and sexual crimes (57.2%) continued to have higher clear up rates in 2023-24 than crimes of dishonesty (33.1%) and damage and reckless behaviour (29.6%).
There were 61,934 incidents of domestic abuse recorded by the police in 2022-23, a decrease of 4% on 2021-22. In 2022-23, 39% of all incidents recorded by the police included the recording of at least one crime or offence.
Between 2020-21 and 2021-22, the number of crimes and offences in which a firearm was alleged to have been involved decreased by 23% (from 353 to 273 offences). The 2021-22 figure is the lowest recorded level since comparable records began in 1980.
How does all this compare with other parts of the UK?
In 2022/23, however, Scotland’s crime rate was the lowest in the UK, with the crime rate in England and Wales rising noticeably during the same period. Scotland’s homicide rate has also fallen, from being the highest in the UK in 2002/03, to the lowest as of 2022/23.
Here’s the third, what thousands of folk, scientifically sampled by University of Edinburgh researchers who could teach research methods and not by a bunch of journalist, doctors, nurses or GMB leaders who could not pass it.
The Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS), carried out by independent University-based researchers interviews around 5 000 Scots asking them to speak of ‘their experiences of, and attitudes to, a range of issues related to crime, policing and the justice system, including crime not reported to the police.‘
This is gold standard research and can be trusted to reveal the world as actually experienced by the wider population and as how the data suggests it is.
The survey update reveals:
Crime has fallen by 53% since 2008-09. Results from the Scottish Crime and Justice Survey (SCJS) show that around one in ten adults were victims of crime in 2021-22 (10.0%), down from 11.9% in 2019-20. This compares to one in five in 2008-09 (20.4%).
The SCJS showed the volume of violent crime fell by nearly three-fifths (58%) between 2008-09 and 2021-22.
Fact!
Sources:
Support Scots Independent, Scotland’s oldest pro-independence newspaper [98!] and host of the OBA (Oliver Brown Award) at: https://scotsindependent.scot/FWShop/shop/
The Oliver Brown Award for advancing the cause of Scotland’s self respect, previously awarded to Dr Philippa Whitford, Alex Salmond and Sean Connery: https://scotsindependent.scot/?page_id=116
About Oliver Brown, the first Scottish National Party candidate to save his deposit in a Parliamentary election: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oliver_Brow


this is factually inaccurate- the figures you are quoting & the graph you have posted ( after removing it’s title) do not relate to the numbers WAITING on home care packages- Not everyone assessed actually requires or receives Home care – far from it
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