Burglary victimization is associated with a temporary elevated risk of future victimization for the same property and nearby properties. Previous research suggests that often the initial and subsequent burglaries involve the same offenders. This paper tests this assertion, using data on detected residential burglaries during the period 1996–2004 in The Hague and its environs, in the Netherlands. It demonstrates that pairs of detected burglaries occurring in close proximity in space and time are much more likely to involve the same offenders than pairs that are not so related. Topics for future research and implications for the detection of burglaries are addressed
Abstract Purpose. The current study tests whether existing behavioural case linkage findings from th...
Abstract: Two broad heuristic strategies have been employed to ex-plain the success of prior burglar...
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
This paper explores some theoretical notions about repeat burglary inctimization, and reports findin...
Although the rate of residential burglary in the Netherlands is slightly less than 1% per year, over...
Using techniques developed in the field of epidemiology, recent research conducted in both the UK (J...
Can a fruitful police surveillance scheme be based on supposedly increased risk immediately after an...
Academic research in recent years has explored the spatial and temporal elements of residental burgl...
Whilst analysis of crime for tactical and strategic reasons within the criminal justice arena has no...
Research has demonstrated that the probability of repeat victimization is greater than the probabili...
The evidence that burglaries cluster spatio-temporally is strong. However, research is unclear on wh...
Whilst case linkage is used with serious forms of serial crime (e. g. rape and murder), the potentia...
Whilst case linkage is used with serious forms of serial crime (e. g. rape and murder), the potentia...
Efter att grannen har haft inbrott ökar risken att drabbas. Denna studie beräknar dessa samband för ...
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
Abstract Purpose. The current study tests whether existing behavioural case linkage findings from th...
Abstract: Two broad heuristic strategies have been employed to ex-plain the success of prior burglar...
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
This paper explores some theoretical notions about repeat burglary inctimization, and reports findin...
Although the rate of residential burglary in the Netherlands is slightly less than 1% per year, over...
Using techniques developed in the field of epidemiology, recent research conducted in both the UK (J...
Can a fruitful police surveillance scheme be based on supposedly increased risk immediately after an...
Academic research in recent years has explored the spatial and temporal elements of residental burgl...
Whilst analysis of crime for tactical and strategic reasons within the criminal justice arena has no...
Research has demonstrated that the probability of repeat victimization is greater than the probabili...
The evidence that burglaries cluster spatio-temporally is strong. However, research is unclear on wh...
Whilst case linkage is used with serious forms of serial crime (e. g. rape and murder), the potentia...
Whilst case linkage is used with serious forms of serial crime (e. g. rape and murder), the potentia...
Efter att grannen har haft inbrott ökar risken att drabbas. Denna studie beräknar dessa samband för ...
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
Abstract Purpose. The current study tests whether existing behavioural case linkage findings from th...
Abstract: Two broad heuristic strategies have been employed to ex-plain the success of prior burglar...
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...