Whether substance abuse treatment centers affect neighborhood crime is hotly debated. Empirical evidence on this issue is lacking because of the difficulty of distinguishing the crime effect of treatment centers in high-crime areas, the inability to make before-and-after compar-isons for clinics founded before computerized crime data, and the need for appropriate control sites. The authors present an innovative method (without an actual data analysis) to overcome these challenges. Clinic addresses and crime data are geocoded by street address. Crimes are counted within concentric-circular, 25-meter “buffers ” around the clinics. Regression analyses are used to calculate the “crime slope ” (β) among the buffers. A negative β indicates more c...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Understanding the context of crime is key to developing informed policy that will reduce crime in co...
Objectives: The aim of this study was to explore the influence of “micro-” (e.g., pubs and fast-food...
In the 1980s, the United States experienced a significant increase in drug offenses and associated f...
The nexus between drug use and crime is an area of intense interest. The United States spends vast a...
The new century brings with it growing interest in crime places. This interest spans theory from the...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Criminologists, planners, and architects search for ways to predict criminals' preferences for commi...
ABSTRACT Research on drug treatment facility locations has focused narrowly on the issue of geograph...
Objectives: Test whether the exposure of street segments to five different potentially criminogenic ...
Siting of drug and alcohol treatment facilities is often met with negative reactions because of the ...
In Newark, NJ, drug dealing is common, but it is not evenly distributed in every part of the city. B...
Modelling the relationship between alcohol consumption and crime generates new knowledge for crime p...
<p>(A) Conceptual depiction of path pattern exposure data to areas of crime prevalence. Each 5 minut...
Putting Crime in its Place: Units of Analysis in Geographic Criminology focuses on the units of anal...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Understanding the context of crime is key to developing informed policy that will reduce crime in co...
Objectives: The aim of this study was to explore the influence of “micro-” (e.g., pubs and fast-food...
In the 1980s, the United States experienced a significant increase in drug offenses and associated f...
The nexus between drug use and crime is an area of intense interest. The United States spends vast a...
The new century brings with it growing interest in crime places. This interest spans theory from the...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Criminologists, planners, and architects search for ways to predict criminals' preferences for commi...
ABSTRACT Research on drug treatment facility locations has focused narrowly on the issue of geograph...
Objectives: Test whether the exposure of street segments to five different potentially criminogenic ...
Siting of drug and alcohol treatment facilities is often met with negative reactions because of the ...
In Newark, NJ, drug dealing is common, but it is not evenly distributed in every part of the city. B...
Modelling the relationship between alcohol consumption and crime generates new knowledge for crime p...
<p>(A) Conceptual depiction of path pattern exposure data to areas of crime prevalence. Each 5 minut...
Putting Crime in its Place: Units of Analysis in Geographic Criminology focuses on the units of anal...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Understanding the context of crime is key to developing informed policy that will reduce crime in co...
Objectives: The aim of this study was to explore the influence of “micro-” (e.g., pubs and fast-food...