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Surveying Victims: Options for Conducting the National Crime Victimization Survey (2008)
Committee on National Statistics (CNSTAT)
Committee on Law and Justice (CLAJ)

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. "References." Surveying Victims: Options for Conducting the National Crime Victimization Survey. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press, 2008.

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Surveying Victims: Options for Conducting the National Crime Victimization Survey

United Nations Economic Commission for Europe and United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime Meeting on Crime Statistics, Vienna.

Walker, S. (1998). Popular Justice: A History of American Criminal Justice (2nd ed.). New York: Oxford University Press.

Warchol, G. (1998, July). Workplace Violence, 1992–96. NCJ 168634. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Wiersema, B. (1999). Area-Identified National Crime Victimization Survey Data: A Resource Available Through the National Consortium on Violence Research. NCOVR Census Center Working Paper 1. Pittsburgh, PA: National Consortium on Violence Research.

Woltman, H. and J. Bushery (1984). Summary of a study examining “differentially weighted estimates of annual victimization rates using a 12-month bounded reference period”. See Lehnen and Skogan (1984), pp. 117–118.

Woltman, H., J. Bushery, and L. Carstensen (1984). Recall bias and telescoping in the National Crime Survey. See Lehnen and Skogan (1984), pp. 90–93.

Work, C. R. (1975). Objectives of the NCS and of victimization surveys. See National Research Council (1976b), pp. 219–228. Incorporated into memorandum to Charles Kindermann.

Wyoming Statistical Analysis Center (2004, Winter). First-ever Wyoming crime victimization survey. Field Notes from the SRC. Newsletter, Survey Research Center, University of Wyoming.

Ybarra, L. M. and S. L. Lohr (2002). Estimates of repeat victimization using the National Crime Victimization Survey. Journal of Quantitative Criminology 18(1), 1–21.

Young, M., T. DuPont-Morales, and J. Burns (1997). Volume I: Pennsylvania Crime Victimization Survey, Executive Report. The Center for Survey Research, Institute of State and Regional Affairs. Middletown, PA: Pennsylvania State University–Harrisburg.

Zawitz, M. W. (1995, July). Guns Used in Crime: Firearms, Crime, and Criminal Justice. NCJ 148201. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics.

Zimring, F. E. and G. Hawkins (1995). Incapacitation: Penal Confinement and the Restraint of Crime. New York: Oxford University Press.

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