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How safe are we? Introducing the multidimensional model of perceived personal safety.

Authors :
Syropoulos, Stylianos
Leidner, Bernhard
Mercado, Evelyn
Li, Mengyao
Cros, Sophie
Gómez, Angel
Baka, Aphrodite
Chekroun, Peggy
Rottman, Joshua
Source :
Personality & Individual Differences. Jul2024, Vol. 224, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Investigations of individual differences in how safe people feel in their social lives have typically used single-item measures or indirect measures. To examine the multifaceted nature of perceived personal safety more comprehensively, we introduce a novel measurement model of perceived personal safety, validated over the course of 8 studies (5 main and 3 supplementary studies; total N = 4390). Three distinct factors capturing variance in perceived personal safety emerged, Feeling of Safety (i.e., experiencing security in day-to-day life), Fear of Crime (i.e., being afraid of victimization), and Safety Confidence (i.e., trusting one's own ability to remain safe). Studies 1–3 introduce a newly developed multidimensional model, providing evidence for its face and construct validity. Studies 4 A-4B suggest that the feeling of safety facet specifically relate to better mental health outcomes, even across the span of one year. Study 5 explored the cross-national validity of this model across four different European countries. Contrary to past conceptualizations, perceived personal safety appears to be multidimensional, with different facets affecting our lives in distinct ways. • A multidimensional, three-factor model of perceived personal safety is validated • Feelings of safety measure levels of safety in familiar, day-to-day environments • Fear of crime captures perceived threat from victimization from different crimes • Safety confidence measures a person's perception that they can protect themselves • Relationships with mental well-being and demographic indicators are highlighted [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01918869
Volume :
224
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Personality & Individual Differences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176500210
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.paid.2024.112640