Who commits crime? Theoretically, risk-tolerant and impatient people are more likely to commit crime because they care less about the risks of apprehension and punishment. By linking experimental data on risk tolerance and impatience of young men to administrative crime records, we find empirical support for this hypothesis. For example, crime rates are 8 to 10 percentage points higher for the most risk-tolerant people compared to the most risk averse. A theoretical implication is that those who are most prone to commit crime are also those who are least responsive to stricter law enforcement. Risk tolerance and impatience significantly predict property crime, while self-control is a stronger predictor of crimes of passion (violent, drug, a...
Deterrence theorists and researchers have argued that the critical dimension of sanction certainty ...
In the law enforcement literature there is a presumption—supported by some experimental and economet...
Decision makers who confront a long sequence of criminal opportunities act differently from those wh...
Who commits crime? Theoretically, risk-tolerant and impatient people are more likely to commit crime...
We show that whatever the representation of criminals' preferences under risk, the assumption accord...
There is a 250-year-old presumption in the criminology and law enforcement literature that people ar...
Objectives to test whether individuals differ in deterrability by studying whether the effect of cri...
Traditional criminological research in the area of rational choice and crime decisions places a stro...
Our research examines the decision to participate in crime using a dynamic model of individual choic...
It is commonly assumed that potential offenders are more responsive to increases in the certainty th...
Society’s efforts to deter crime with punishment may be ineffective because those indi-viduals most ...
Rational offender models assume that individuals choose whether to offend by weighing the rewards ag...
Engagement in criminal activity may be viewed as risk-taking behaviour as it has both benefits and d...
Crime surveys typically ask respondents how ‘likely’ they think it is that they will become a crime ...
Most crime prevention practices assume offenders will desist from crime if the opportunity to offend...
Deterrence theorists and researchers have argued that the critical dimension of sanction certainty ...
In the law enforcement literature there is a presumption—supported by some experimental and economet...
Decision makers who confront a long sequence of criminal opportunities act differently from those wh...
Who commits crime? Theoretically, risk-tolerant and impatient people are more likely to commit crime...
We show that whatever the representation of criminals' preferences under risk, the assumption accord...
There is a 250-year-old presumption in the criminology and law enforcement literature that people ar...
Objectives to test whether individuals differ in deterrability by studying whether the effect of cri...
Traditional criminological research in the area of rational choice and crime decisions places a stro...
Our research examines the decision to participate in crime using a dynamic model of individual choic...
It is commonly assumed that potential offenders are more responsive to increases in the certainty th...
Society’s efforts to deter crime with punishment may be ineffective because those indi-viduals most ...
Rational offender models assume that individuals choose whether to offend by weighing the rewards ag...
Engagement in criminal activity may be viewed as risk-taking behaviour as it has both benefits and d...
Crime surveys typically ask respondents how ‘likely’ they think it is that they will become a crime ...
Most crime prevention practices assume offenders will desist from crime if the opportunity to offend...
Deterrence theorists and researchers have argued that the critical dimension of sanction certainty ...
In the law enforcement literature there is a presumption—supported by some experimental and economet...
Decision makers who confront a long sequence of criminal opportunities act differently from those wh...