A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore

This paper examines the fear of crime in Singapore to enhance future Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) studies on rehabilitation programmes. Using a contingent valuation (CV) method, the study quantifies Singaporeans’ willingness to pay (WTP) to reduce three types of crimes: murder, theft, and cybercrime...

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Main Authors: Chiou, Zi Lin, Tan, Genevieve Wan Xin, Yap, Hermann Zhen Hao
Other Authors: Chia Wai Mun
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175537
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1755372024-05-05T15:32:15Z A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore Chiou, Zi Lin Tan, Genevieve Wan Xin Yap, Hermann Zhen Hao Chia Wai Mun School of Social Sciences ASWMChia@ntu.edu.sg Social Sciences Fear of crime Contingent valuation This paper examines the fear of crime in Singapore to enhance future Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) studies on rehabilitation programmes. Using a contingent valuation (CV) method, the study quantifies Singaporeans’ willingness to pay (WTP) to reduce three types of crimes: murder, theft, and cybercrime and scams. 254 respondents were surveyed. The findings show a collective WTP of S$163.70 million for murder, S$61.36 million for theft, and S$88.08 million for cybercrime and scams. This study expands beyond demographic factors – such as age, income, and ethnicity – to study how contextual factors such as social and informal social controls, environment, sense of safety and exposure to mass media affect Singaporeans’ WTP. Our findings corroborate existing findings that demographic factors have a significant influence on Singaporeans’ WTP. However, contextual factors were found to be insignificant, perhaps due to a sense of safety that has been taken for granted. Our findings indicate that policy measures to address the public’s fear of crime would be more effective in targeting families and the elderly population. Finally, our findings also indicate that rehabilitation programmes in Singapore can be better redesigned to address the fears of specified population segments. Bachelor's degree 2024-04-29T02:43:46Z 2024-04-29T02:43:46Z 2024 Final Year Project (FYP) Chiou, Z. L., Tan, G. W. X. & Yap, H. Z. H. (2024). A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175537 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175537 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social Sciences
Fear of crime
Contingent valuation
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Fear of crime
Contingent valuation
Chiou, Zi Lin
Tan, Genevieve Wan Xin
Yap, Hermann Zhen Hao
A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
description This paper examines the fear of crime in Singapore to enhance future Cost-Benefit Analysis (CBA) studies on rehabilitation programmes. Using a contingent valuation (CV) method, the study quantifies Singaporeans’ willingness to pay (WTP) to reduce three types of crimes: murder, theft, and cybercrime and scams. 254 respondents were surveyed. The findings show a collective WTP of S$163.70 million for murder, S$61.36 million for theft, and S$88.08 million for cybercrime and scams. This study expands beyond demographic factors – such as age, income, and ethnicity – to study how contextual factors such as social and informal social controls, environment, sense of safety and exposure to mass media affect Singaporeans’ WTP. Our findings corroborate existing findings that demographic factors have a significant influence on Singaporeans’ WTP. However, contextual factors were found to be insignificant, perhaps due to a sense of safety that has been taken for granted. Our findings indicate that policy measures to address the public’s fear of crime would be more effective in targeting families and the elderly population. Finally, our findings also indicate that rehabilitation programmes in Singapore can be better redesigned to address the fears of specified population segments.
author2 Chia Wai Mun
author_facet Chia Wai Mun
Chiou, Zi Lin
Tan, Genevieve Wan Xin
Yap, Hermann Zhen Hao
format Final Year Project
author Chiou, Zi Lin
Tan, Genevieve Wan Xin
Yap, Hermann Zhen Hao
author_sort Chiou, Zi Lin
title A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
title_short A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
title_full A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
title_fullStr A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed A contingent valuation study on fear of crime in Singapore
title_sort contingent valuation study on fear of crime in singapore
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/175537
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