Name File Type Size Last Modified
asr_1980_2015_csv.zip application/zip 313.4 MB 05/15/2018 07:03:PM
asr_1980_2015_dta.zip application/zip 457.8 MB 05/15/2018 03:27:PM
asr_1980_2015_rda.zip application/zip 428.7 MB 05/15/2018 07:40:PM
asr_1980_2015_sav.zip application/zip 462 MB 05/15/2018 07:16:PM

Project Citation: 

Kaplan, Jacob. Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program Data: Arrests by Age, Sex, and Race, 1980-2015. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2018-05-15. https://doi.org/10.3886/E102263V1

Project Description

Summary:  View help for Summary The Arrests by Age, Sex, and Race data is an FBI data set that is part of the annual Uniform Crime Report Program data. This data contains highly granular data on the number of people arrested for a variety of crimes (see below for a full list of included crimes). The data sets here aggregate all of the years 1980-2015 data into a single file. These files are quite large and may take some time to load.

All the data was downloaded from NACJD as ASCII+SPSS Setup files and read into R using the package asciiSetupReader. All work to clean the data and save it in various file formats was also done in R. For the R code used to clean this data, see here. https://github.com/jacobkap/crime_data. If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions please contact me at jkkaplan6@gmail.com.

I did not make any changes to the data other than the following. When an arrest column has a value of "None/not reported", I change that value to zero. This makes the (possible incorrect) assumption that these values represent zero crimes reported. The original data does not have a value when the agency reports zero arrests other than "None/not reported." In other words, this data does not differentiate between real zeros and missing values. Some agencies also incorrectly report the following numbers of arrests which I change to 0: 10000, 20000, 30000, 40000, 50000, 99999, 99998.

To reduce file size and make the data more manageable, all of the data is aggregated yearly. All of the data is in agency-year units such that every row indicates an agency in a given year. Columns are crime-arrest category units. For example, If you choose the data set that includes murder, you would have rows for each agency-year and columns with the number of people arrests for murder. The ASR data breaks down arrests by age and gender (e.g. Male aged 15, Male aged 18). They also provide the number of adults or juveniles arrested by race. Because most agencies and years do not report the arrestee's ethnicity (Hispanic or not Hispanic) or juvenile outcomes (e.g. referred to adult court, referred to welfare agency), I do not include these columns.

To make it easier to merge with other data, I merged this data with the Law Enforcement Agency Identifiers Crosswalk (LEAIC) data. The data from the LEAIC add FIPS (state, county, and place) and agency type/subtype. Please note that some of the FIPS codes have leading zeros and if you open it in Excel it will automatically delete those leading zeros.

I created 9 arrest categories myself. The categories are:
  • Total Male Juvenile
  • Total Female Juvenile
  • Total Male Adult
  • Total Female Adult
  • Total Male
  • Total Female
  • Total Juvenile
  • Total Adult
  • Total Arrests
All of these categories are based on the sums of the sex-age categories (e.g. Male under 10, Female aged 22) rather than using the provided age-race categories (e.g. adult Black, juvenile Asian). As not all agencies report the race data, my method is more accurate. These categories also make up the data in the "simple" version of the data. The "simple" file only includes the above 9 columns as the arrest data (all other columns in the data are just agency identifier columns). Because this "simple" data set need fewer columns, I include all offenses.

As the arrest data is very granular, and each category of arrest is its own column, there are dozens of columns per crime. To keep the data somewhat manageable, there are six different files, five which contain different crimes and the "simple" file. Each file contains the data for all years. The five categories each have crimes belonging to a major crime category and do not overlap in crimes other than the index crimes and the violent/sex crimes categories. Please note that the crime names provided below are not the same as the column names in the data. Due to Stata limiting column names to 32 characters maximum, I have abbreviated the crime names in the data. The files and their including crimes are:

Index Crimes
  • Murder
  • Rape
  • Robbery
  • Aggravated Assault
  • Burglary
  • Theft
  • Motor Vehicle Theft
  • Arson
Drug and Liquor Crimes
  • Total Drugs
  • Sale Drugs
  • Possession Drugs
  • Possession Cannabis
  • Sale Cannabis
  • Possession Cocaine
  • Sale Cocaine
  • Sale Other Drug
  • Possession Addicting Narcotic
  • Sale Addicting Narcotic
  • DUI
  • Liquor Laws
  • Drunkenness
Financial Crimes
  • Forgery
  • Fraud
  • Embezzlement
  • Gambling Total
  • Other Gambling
  • Bookmaking
  • Number Lottery
Violent or Sex Crimes
  • Murder
  • Rape
  • Robbery
  • Aggravated Assault
  • Other Assault
  • Weapons
  • Prostitution
  • Non-Rape Sex Offense
  • Manslaughter by Negligence
Other Crimes
  • Vandalism
  • Family Offenses
  • Disorderly Conduct
  • Other Non-Traffic
  • Curfew
  • Stolen Property
  • Vagrancy
  • Runaway
  • Suspicion
Simple
  • This data set has every crime and only the arrest categories that I created (see above).

If you have any questions, comments, or suggestions please contact me at jkkaplan6@gmail.com.

Scope of Project

Subject Terms:  View help for Subject Terms arrest; arrest rates; Uniform Crime Reports; FBI; UCR; crime; crime statistics; arrest statistics
Geographic Coverage:  View help for Geographic Coverage United States
Time Period(s):  View help for Time Period(s) 1980 – 2015
Universe:  View help for Universe Police agencies in the United States
Data Type(s):  View help for Data Type(s) administrative records data

Methodology

Data Source:  View help for Data Source United States Department of Justice. Federal Bureau of Investigation
Unit(s) of Observation:  View help for Unit(s) of Observation Police Agency
Geographic Unit:  View help for Geographic Unit Police agency jurisdiction

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