Criminal activities are often unevenly distributed over space. The literature shows that the occurrence of crime is frequently concentrated in particular neighbourhoods and is related to a variety of socioeconomic and crime opportunity factors. This study explores the broad patterning of property and violent crime among different socio-economic stratums and across space by examining the neighbourhood socioeconomic conditions and individual characteristics of offenders associated with crime in the city of Toronto, which consists of 140 neighbourhoods. Despite being the largest urban centre in Canada, with a fast-growing population, Toronto is under-studied in crime analysis from a spatial perspective. In this study, both property and violent...
Using a unique neighborhood crime dataset for Bogotá in 2011, this study uses a spatial econometric ...
The study of crime and place recognizes the important interplay between the physical landscape and c...
Burglary prevalence within neighbourhoods is well understood but the risk from bordering areas is un...
Income inequality and crime are two social problems concerning many nations around the world. Such s...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
Abstract Purpose/background A new body of research that focuses on crime harm scores rather than cou...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
This research uses homicide and marginalization data from the city of Toronto in order to understand...
It has been repeatedly shown that there are temporal and spatial concentrations of crime. Various re...
This thesis explores the spatial distribution of crime in Ottawa, Canada in 2006. Crime pattern the...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
Using a unique neighborhood crime dataset for Bogotá in 2011, this study uses a spatial econometric ...
Using a unique neighborhood crime dataset for Bogotá in 2011, this study uses a spatial econometric ...
The study of crime and place recognizes the important interplay between the physical landscape and c...
Burglary prevalence within neighbourhoods is well understood but the risk from bordering areas is un...
Income inequality and crime are two social problems concerning many nations around the world. Such s...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
Abstract Purpose/background A new body of research that focuses on crime harm scores rather than cou...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
This research uses homicide and marginalization data from the city of Toronto in order to understand...
It has been repeatedly shown that there are temporal and spatial concentrations of crime. Various re...
This thesis explores the spatial distribution of crime in Ottawa, Canada in 2006. Crime pattern the...
This thesis was completed and submitted at Nipissing University, and is made freely accessible throu...
Using a unique neighborhood crime dataset for Bogotá in 2011, this study uses a spatial econometric ...
Using a unique neighborhood crime dataset for Bogotá in 2011, this study uses a spatial econometric ...
The study of crime and place recognizes the important interplay between the physical landscape and c...
Burglary prevalence within neighbourhoods is well understood but the risk from bordering areas is un...