It has been repeatedly shown that there are temporal and spatial concentrations of crime. Various research indicates that a motivated offender has a greater chance of committing a crime near his or her home base, and may also travel to familiar places where more potential targets exist. Thus, the areas where motivated offenders live and spend time, or pass by frequently in their daily activities will tend to have more occurrences of criminal events influencing patterns in crime. Traditionally, it has been thought that spatial patterns of crime are more related to stranger-to-stranger property and / or violent crimes than crimes occurring between known-to-known people. In this research, it is argued that patterns of crime exist whether it is...
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...
It is well established that offenders’ routine activity locations (nodes) shape their crime location...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Criminal activities are often unevenly distributed over space. The literature shows that the occurre...
The importance of repeat victims as an effective target for crime prevention measures has been widel...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders’ crimes ...
The new century brings with it growing interest in crime places. This interest spans theory from the...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
The study of crime and place recognizes the important interplay between the physical landscape and c...
Traditionally, scholars have taken an offender-centred approach to the understanding of sexual viole...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
This thesis explores the spatial distribution of crime in Ottawa, Canada in 2006. Crime pattern the...
Understanding the relationships between individual offenders’ crime locations and their prior activi...
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...
It is well established that offenders’ routine activity locations (nodes) shape their crime location...
Objectives: Investigate the spatial concentrations and spatial stability of criminal event data at t...
Criminologists have long-known that spatial crime patterns vary across different geographic areas. U...
Criminal activities are often unevenly distributed over space. The literature shows that the occurre...
The importance of repeat victims as an effective target for crime prevention measures has been widel...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders’ crimes ...
The new century brings with it growing interest in crime places. This interest spans theory from the...
Traditional ecological analyses of burglary have a number of shortcomings. First, break-ins occurrin...
The study of crime and place recognizes the important interplay between the physical landscape and c...
Traditionally, scholars have taken an offender-centred approach to the understanding of sexual viole...
Urban crimes are not homogeneously distributed but exhibit spatial heterogeneity across a range of s...
This thesis explores the spatial distribution of crime in Ottawa, Canada in 2006. Crime pattern the...
Understanding the relationships between individual offenders’ crime locations and their prior activi...
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...
It is well established that offenders’ routine activity locations (nodes) shape their crime location...