34 research outputs found

    Hot spots policing effects on crime

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    In recent years, crime scholars and practitioners have pointed to the potential benefits of focusing crime prevention efforts on crime places. A number of studies suggest that there is significant clustering of crime in small places, or “hot spots,” that generate half of all criminal events. A number of researchers have argued that many crime problems can be reduced more efficiently if police officers focused their attention to these deviant places. The appeal of focusing limited resources on a small number of high-activity crime places is straightforward. If we can prevent crime at these hot spots, then we might be able to reduce total crime. Objectives: To assess the effects of focused police crime prevention interventions at crime hot spots. The review also examined whether focused police actions at specific locations result in crime displacement (i.e., crime moving around the corner) or diffusion (i.e., crime reduction in surrounding areas) of crime control benefits

    The Theory of Reasoned Action: A Decision Theory of Crime

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    The rational choice perspective as outlined in the Introduction to this volume is concerned mainly with presenting in a general way the advantages of treating criminal behavior as a broadly rational activity. It therefore has little directly to say about the specific nature of the decision-making processes used in making criminal choices. Despite th
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