top-down approach

Cards (10)

  • offender profiling
    - main aim of offender profiling is to narrow the list of likely suspects
    - professional profilers are employed to work alongside the police especially in high-profile murder cases
    - the scene and other evidence are analysed to generate hypotheses about the probable characteristics of the offender e.g. age, background, occupation
  • top down approach
    - the FBI interviewed 36 sexually-motivated murderers and used this data, together with characteristics of their crimes to create two categories (organised and disorganised)
    - if the data from crime scene matched some of the characteristics of one category we could then predict other characteristics that would be likely
  • offender types based on 'ways of working'
    - the organised and disorganised distinction is based on the idea that offenders have certain signature 'ways of working'
    - these generally correlate with a particular set of social and psychological characteristics that relate to the individual
  • organised characteristics
    - evidence of planning the crime; victim is deliberately targeted and the killer/rapist may have a 'type' of victim
    - high degree of control during the crime and little evidence left behind at the scene
    - above average IQ; in a skilled/professional job
    - usually married and may even have children
  • disorganised characteristics
    - little evidence of planning, suggesting the offence may have been spontaneous
    - the crime scene reflects the impulsive nature of the act e.g. body still at the scene and the crime shows little control on the part of the offender
    - below average IQ; may be in unskilled work or employed
    - a history of failed relationships and living alone, possible history of sexual dysfunction
  • FBI profile construction
    1. data assimilation - review of the evidence e.g. photographs, pathology reports
    2. crime scene classification - organised or disorganised
    3. crime reconstruction - generation of hypotheses about the behaviour and events
    4. profile generation - generation of hypotheses about the offender e.g. background, physical characteristics
  • strength
    P - research support for an organised category
    E - Canter et al (2004) looked at 100 US serial killings. Smallest space analysis was used to assess the co-occurrence of 39 aspects of the serial killings
    E - this analysis revealed a subset of behaviours of many serial killings which match the FBI's typology for organised offenders
    L - this suggests that a key component of the FBI typology approach has some validity
    COUNTERPOINT
    - Godwin (2002) argues that, in reality, most killers have multiple contrasting characteristics and don't fit into one 'type'
    - this suggests that the organised/disorganised typology is probably more of a continuum.
  • strength
    P - it can be adapted to other types of crime e.g. burglary
    E - Meketa (2017) reports that top down profiling has recently been applied to burglary, leading to an 85% rise in solved cases in three US states
    E - the detection method adds two new categories: interpersonal (offender knows their victim, steals something of significance) and opportunistic (inexperienced young offender)
    L - this suggests that top down profiling has wider application than was originally assumed
  • limitation
    P - evidence for top down profiling was flawed
    E - Canter et al (2004) argues that the FBI agents did not select a random or even large sample, nor did it include different kinds of offender
    E - there was no standard set of questions so each interview was different and therefore not really comparable
    L - this suggests that top down profiling does not have a solid scientific basis
  • limitation
    P - personality
    E - the top down approach is based on behavioural consistency; that serial offenders have characteristic ways of working so crime scene characteristics help identification
    E - Mischel (196) argued that people's behaviour is much more driven by the situation they are in than by a thing called 'personality'
    L - this suggests that a profiling method based on behavioural consistency may not always lead to successful identification of an offender