Objectives: Examine how neighborhoods vary in the degree to which they experience repeat/near repeat crime patterns and whether theoretical constructs representing neighborhood-level context, including social ecology and structural attributes, can explain variation in single incidents and those linked in space and time. Methods: Examine social, structural, and environmental design covariates from the American Community Survey to assess the context of near repeat burglary at the block group level. Spatially lagged negative binomial regression models were estimated to assess the relative contribution of these covariates on single and repeat/near repeat burglary counts. Results: Positive and consistent association between concentrated disadvan...
The evidence that burglaries cluster spatio-temporally is strong. However, research is unclear on wh...
In 1989 Sampson and Groves proposed a model of social disorganization. In this model, neighborhoods ...
Numerous studies have shown that near repeat victimization of burglaries can account for a substanti...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
Near repeat analysis has been increasingly used to measure the spatiotemporal clustering of crime in...
Research concerned with burglary indicates that it is clustered not only at places but also in time....
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
This book deals with the distribution of criminal victimization across social groups and spatial are...
This book deals with the distribution of criminal victimization across social groups and spatial are...
Using a longitudinal data set of 317 neighborhoods from 1996 to 2002 in Utrecht, The Netherlands, th...
Whilst analysis of crime for tactical and strategic reasons within the criminal justice arena has no...
This analysis explores the formation of stable hot spots and the overall shifts of repeat and near r...
"Prior research frequently observes a positive cross-sectional relationship between various neighbor...
This paper explores some theoretical notions about repeat burglary inctimization, and reports findin...
It is generally acknowledged that the urban environment presents different types of risk factors, bu...
The evidence that burglaries cluster spatio-temporally is strong. However, research is unclear on wh...
In 1989 Sampson and Groves proposed a model of social disorganization. In this model, neighborhoods ...
Numerous studies have shown that near repeat victimization of burglaries can account for a substanti...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
Near repeat analysis has been increasingly used to measure the spatiotemporal clustering of crime in...
Research concerned with burglary indicates that it is clustered not only at places but also in time....
Near-repeat crime refers to a pattern whereby one crime event is soon followed by a similar crime ev...
This book deals with the distribution of criminal victimization across social groups and spatial are...
This book deals with the distribution of criminal victimization across social groups and spatial are...
Using a longitudinal data set of 317 neighborhoods from 1996 to 2002 in Utrecht, The Netherlands, th...
Whilst analysis of crime for tactical and strategic reasons within the criminal justice arena has no...
This analysis explores the formation of stable hot spots and the overall shifts of repeat and near r...
"Prior research frequently observes a positive cross-sectional relationship between various neighbor...
This paper explores some theoretical notions about repeat burglary inctimization, and reports findin...
It is generally acknowledged that the urban environment presents different types of risk factors, bu...
The evidence that burglaries cluster spatio-temporally is strong. However, research is unclear on wh...
In 1989 Sampson and Groves proposed a model of social disorganization. In this model, neighborhoods ...
Numerous studies have shown that near repeat victimization of burglaries can account for a substanti...