Costs of crime in Canada, 2014

Costs of crime in Canada, 2014 Crime in Canada is a costly social phenomenon that affects everyone. The effects of crime are far-reaching and can include: -direct financial costs to the institutions that make up the criminal justice system; -ndirect costs to other social institutions and to the Canadian economy more broadly; and, -physical, emotional, and financial toll costs to victims and their families. While some of these costs are tangible and more easily counted (e.g., actual dollars spent by an institution), others are intangible and more difficult to measure (e.g., pain and suffering). An important body of work has however, attempted to translate the intangible impacts of crime into economic losses or costs.Footnote1 Interpreting the impacts of crime in this way can help policy makers to budget and allocate resources more effectively. It can also help to develop evidence-based strategies for crime-prevention that weigh the costs of crime against the costs of social interventions. Such strategies could include, for example, investing in social programs that prevent and reduce the effect of crime on people, businesses, institutions, and the Canadian economy 2023-09-24 Department of Justice Canada OG-GO@justice.gc.ca Government and PoliticsSociety and CultureCrime statistics; Criminal justice Costs of crime in Canada, 2014HTML https://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/jr/ccc2014/index.html Costs of crime in Canada, 2014HTML https://www.justice.gc.ca/fra/pr-rp/jr/ccc2014/index.html Costs of crime in Canada, 2014PDF https://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/jr/ccc2014/docs/rsd_2023rr-costs-of-crime-2014_eng.pdf Costs of crime in Canada, 2014PDF https://www.justice.gc.ca/fra/pr-rp/jr/ccc2014/docs/rsd_2023rr-costs-of-crime-2014_fra.pdf

Crime in Canada is a costly social phenomenon that affects everyone. The effects of crime are far-reaching and can include: -direct financial costs to the institutions that make up the criminal justice system; -ndirect costs to other social institutions and to the Canadian economy more broadly; and, -physical, emotional, and financial toll costs to victims and their families. While some of these costs are tangible and more easily counted (e.g., actual dollars spent by an institution), others are intangible and more difficult to measure (e.g., pain and suffering). An important body of work has however, attempted to translate the intangible impacts of crime into economic losses or costs.Footnote1 Interpreting the impacts of crime in this way can help policy makers to budget and allocate resources more effectively. It can also help to develop evidence-based strategies for crime-prevention that weigh the costs of crime against the costs of social interventions. Such strategies could include, for example, investing in social programs that prevent and reduce the effect of crime on people, businesses, institutions, and the Canadian economy

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