Abstract

Although research on missing persons has globally increased during the past few years, most of the studies conducted have focused on the description of socio-demographic and situational factors associated with this phenomenon. The aim of this study is to explore in-depth the relation between missing person’s socio-demographic factors and missing person’s typology and outcomes. A full 1-year sample of police recorded missing persons (n = 24,284) was extracted from the Spanish ‘Missing Persons and Unidentified Human Remains (PDyRH)’ system and a multivariate statistical approach was used. The findings of this research show that, although nationality and gender are mainly important from a descriptive level, age is the socio-demographic variable that better classifies the typology and outcome of missing person cases. These findings suggest that age is a modulating variable of this phenomenon. Thus, there is a need for the conduction of research for each specific age group focused on identifying psychosocial, criminological and geographical risk factors which could explain missing person case outcomes from a multifaceted approach. Considering previous research in the field, the findings of this research are mostly consistent with these previous studies and entail different implications, both at prevention level and in the scope of police investigations.

Highlights

  • Recorded missing person statistics consistently highlight the scale of the operational challenge faced by police in this area and the need for research to facilitate prevention and maximise the effectiveness of multi-agency response (Ferguson & Soave, 2020; Gong et al, 2017; National Crime Agency, 2016; National Crime Information CenterFBI, 2017; Spanish Ministry of Interior, 2020; Stevenson & Thomas, 2018; Todorović & Butorac, 2017)

  • Using a sample comprising all missing person cases recorded over a 1-year period on the Spanish law enforcement system PDyRH, this study aims to test whether key distinguishing missing person variables are statistically associated with typology and outcome

  • Age significantly differs between different types and outcomes of missing person cases (F= 91.102, p< .000; F= 278.067, p

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Summary

Introduction

Recorded missing person statistics consistently highlight the scale of the operational challenge faced by police in this area and the need for research to facilitate prevention and maximise the effectiveness of multi-agency response (Ferguson & Soave, 2020; Gong et al, 2017; National Crime Agency, 2016; National Crime Information CenterFBI, 2017; Spanish Ministry of Interior, 2020; Stevenson & Thomas, 2018; Todorović & Butorac, 2017). Central to this is the need to develop critical understanding of the risk factors that may provide an early indication of cases likely to end in a harmful or fatal outcome (García-Barceló et al, 2019). In Spain, the Ministry of Interior (2021) indicate that a missing person is ‘anyone who is absent from his habitual residence for no apparent reason, or whose new residence is unknown, giving rise to the search process focused on his/her own safety and family or social interest’

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