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Public Safety Indicator
Our Public Safety Indicator maps the rapid evolution in the debate
about this aspect of our quality of life. In October 2001, the US
instituted a cabinet-level Office of Homeland Security. This has
elevated the public's awareness about all aspects of public safety
and altered the nature of law enforcement along with new laws on
security promulgated by the Justice Department. Information-age
crimes, from money-laundering and Internet fraud to terrorists and
global mafia, now affect domestic public safety. Many critics see
the efforts to alert the American people continually about non-specific
threats - daily amplified in mass media - are leading to misplaced
focus on domestic surveillance, greater screening of airline passengers
and carry-on bags, even leading to massive loss of confidence and
even paranoia. Our Indicator takes a probabilistic approach, i.e.,
between chances of becoming a victim of crime or terrorism versus
many statistically greater threats in daily life - often self-imposed,
such as cigarette smoking and unsafe driving habits. While homeland
security could be greatly improved, many other safety risks besides
terrorism need addressing. As our society became more complex, the
views that safety was a personal affair and risk-taking a private
choice has evolved.
While individuals are still largely responsible
for their behavior, today we live in an interdependent world. Many
risks of daily life (e.g., exposure to toxic wastes, gun violence
in schools, car and highway design, and risks in foods and other
products) are involuntary and often unavoidable. Thus our indicator
also captures these new concerns in public safety and links today's
risks to health, education, and cultural factors. Crime statistics
and the tragedies of gun violence are seen in this larger setting.
This systemic view provides insights for individual risk-reduction
and may help us rethink our views on improving public safety. Some
of our expert colleagues have suggested that we gather data on the
increase of white-collar crime (for example the daily revelations
of corporate criminality), as well as money-laundering, international
trafficking in drugs, arms and even human beings since the US is
involved in all these criminal or terrorist activities. The investigative
activities of the Treasury Department, the Securities and Exchange
Commission, state attorneys general and prosecutors, often in cooperation
with Interpol and other UN agencies are bringing greater, more effective
resources to bear on all these concerns. We welcome all such constructive
suggestions from professionals in the indicators field.
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