Whereas there is a burgeoning literature focusing on the spatial distribution of crime events across neighborhoods or micro-geographic units in a specific city, the present study expands this line of research by selecting four cities that vary across two macro-spatial dimensions: population in the micro-environment, and population in the broader macro-environment. We assess the relationship between measures constructed at different spatial scales and robbery rates in blocks in four cities: 1) San Francisco (high in micro- and macro-environment population); 2) Honolulu (high in micro- but low in macro-environment population); 3) Los Angeles (low in micro- but high in macro-environment population); 4) Sacramento (low in micro- and macro-envir...
Abstract Over the last 40 years, the question of how crime varies across places has gotten greater a...
The current study spatially examines the local variability of robbery rates in the City of Saint Lou...
The intraurban distribution of crime, and attempts to\ud explain its patterns, are becoming increasi...
Whereas there is a burgeoning literature focusing on the spatial distribution of crime events across...
Abstract The current study examines spatial dependence in robbery rates for a sample of 1,056 cities...
Objectives We argue that assessing the level of crime concentration across cities has four challenge...
We compare the relative importance of four dimensions for explaining the micro location of robberies...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 106-112)The intent of this study was to analyze and to de...
The structure and functions of neighborhoods determine the impact of measures used to estimate the d...
Objectives: Given the evidence that crime events exhibit both a spatial and a temporal pattern, we e...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
Nowadays, 23% of the world population lives in multi-million cities. In these metropolises, criminal...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Two historically distinct bodies of research evidence have developed in criminology to understand th...
Abstract Over the last 40 years, the question of how crime varies across places has gotten greater a...
The current study spatially examines the local variability of robbery rates in the City of Saint Lou...
The intraurban distribution of crime, and attempts to\ud explain its patterns, are becoming increasi...
Whereas there is a burgeoning literature focusing on the spatial distribution of crime events across...
Abstract The current study examines spatial dependence in robbery rates for a sample of 1,056 cities...
Objectives We argue that assessing the level of crime concentration across cities has four challenge...
We compare the relative importance of four dimensions for explaining the micro location of robberies...
Includes bibliographical references (pages 106-112)The intent of this study was to analyze and to de...
The structure and functions of neighborhoods determine the impact of measures used to estimate the d...
Objectives: Given the evidence that crime events exhibit both a spatial and a temporal pattern, we e...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
Nowadays, 23% of the world population lives in multi-million cities. In these metropolises, criminal...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Two historically distinct bodies of research evidence have developed in criminology to understand th...
Abstract Over the last 40 years, the question of how crime varies across places has gotten greater a...
The current study spatially examines the local variability of robbery rates in the City of Saint Lou...
The intraurban distribution of crime, and attempts to\ud explain its patterns, are becoming increasi...