Abstract Purpose/background A new body of research that focuses on crime harm scores rather than counts of crime incidents has emerged. Specifically in the context of spatial analysis of crime, focusing on crime harm suggests that harm is more concentrated than counts, at the level of crime hot spots. It remains presently unclear what drives the concentration distributions, and whether the count-based model should be abandoned. Methods Cross-sectional and longitudinal analysis of 6 year of spatiotemporal crime data in Toronto, Canada, to compare patterns and concentration of crime harm (measured in terms of the Crime Severity Index (CSI) against crime counts. Conditional probabilities, trajectory analyses, power few concentrations, and spat...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Purpose - To examine if, and how, spatial crime patterns are explained by one or more underlying cri...
Criminal activities are often unevenly distributed over space. The literature shows that the occurre...
Objectives We argue that assessing the level of crime concentration across cities has four challenge...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Since place-based crime has been studied, scholars have employed a variety of ways to describe the c...
Since place-based crime has been studied, scholars have employed a variety of ways to describe the c...
Abstract Over the last 40 years, the question of how crime varies across places has gotten greater a...
The main techniques used for quantitative analyses of urban crime can generally be divided into thre...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
The Geography of Crime consists of five articles. The first article, Exploring opportunities for geo...
I propose a general theory for examining the spatial distribution of crime by specifically addressin...
Crime maps are becoming significant tools in crime and justice. Advances in the areas of information...
Purpose To examine if, and how, spatial crime patterns are explained by one or more underlying crim...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Purpose - To examine if, and how, spatial crime patterns are explained by one or more underlying cri...
Criminal activities are often unevenly distributed over space. The literature shows that the occurre...
Objectives We argue that assessing the level of crime concentration across cities has four challenge...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Since place-based crime has been studied, scholars have employed a variety of ways to describe the c...
Since place-based crime has been studied, scholars have employed a variety of ways to describe the c...
Abstract Over the last 40 years, the question of how crime varies across places has gotten greater a...
The main techniques used for quantitative analyses of urban crime can generally be divided into thre...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
The Geography of Crime consists of five articles. The first article, Exploring opportunities for geo...
I propose a general theory for examining the spatial distribution of crime by specifically addressin...
Crime maps are becoming significant tools in crime and justice. Advances in the areas of information...
Purpose To examine if, and how, spatial crime patterns are explained by one or more underlying crim...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
Recent research in the ‘‘crime at places’ ’ literature is concerned with smaller units of analysis t...
Purpose - To examine if, and how, spatial crime patterns are explained by one or more underlying cri...