This paper argues that the study of crime and the fear of crime in rural ar
eas reveals much about the geography of crime, policing and rural society.
Drawing upon a crime and safety survey conducted with residents of a rural
parish in Worcestershire it establishes a link between fear of crime and 'c
ultural threats' to residents' dominant constructions of rurality. It concl
udes by considering the 1998 Crime and Disorder Act and its implications fo
r rural policing and society.