Social disorganization and routine activity theories have been studied over the past 30 years. The subsequent research examines prior concepts that were constructed to measure these theories and recent attempts in combining these theories. It also examines how these concepts have been measured using a multitude of geographical scales. It suggests that one consistent set of geographical scales must be used and that these must be easily reproduced in order to test these concepts on a multitude of cities that have a wide variation in populations
The study of social disorganization and its effects on crime has largely been focused on metropolita...
This paper reports findings from an exploratory, place specific study of the relationship between vi...
This paper analyzed the spatial patterns of four types of crime (assault, robbery, autotheft, and bu...
Social disorganization and routine activity theories have been studied over the past 30 years. The s...
Objectives: Examine how neighborhoods vary in the degree to which they experience repeat/near repeat...
Social disorganization theory and routine activities theory have been extensively applied separately...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
The purpose of this study is to better understand predictors of neighborhood crime in metropolitan a...
It is generally acknowledged that the urban environment presents different types of risk factors, bu...
Social disorganization theory proposes that neighborhood characteristics, such as residential instab...
Predicting residential burglary can benefit from understanding human movement patterns within an urb...
In 1989 Sampson and Groves proposed a model of social disorganization. In this model, neighborhoods ...
Extant criminological research examining research questions oriented on understanding the spatial di...
We consider the problem of estimating the incidence of residential burglaries that occur over a well...
Six different social disorganization models of neighbourhood crime and offender rates were tested us...
The study of social disorganization and its effects on crime has largely been focused on metropolita...
This paper reports findings from an exploratory, place specific study of the relationship between vi...
This paper analyzed the spatial patterns of four types of crime (assault, robbery, autotheft, and bu...
Social disorganization and routine activity theories have been studied over the past 30 years. The s...
Objectives: Examine how neighborhoods vary in the degree to which they experience repeat/near repeat...
Social disorganization theory and routine activities theory have been extensively applied separately...
The importance of neighborhoods and places in understanding crime has been widely noted in criminolo...
The purpose of this study is to better understand predictors of neighborhood crime in metropolitan a...
It is generally acknowledged that the urban environment presents different types of risk factors, bu...
Social disorganization theory proposes that neighborhood characteristics, such as residential instab...
Predicting residential burglary can benefit from understanding human movement patterns within an urb...
In 1989 Sampson and Groves proposed a model of social disorganization. In this model, neighborhoods ...
Extant criminological research examining research questions oriented on understanding the spatial di...
We consider the problem of estimating the incidence of residential burglaries that occur over a well...
Six different social disorganization models of neighbourhood crime and offender rates were tested us...
The study of social disorganization and its effects on crime has largely been focused on metropolita...
This paper reports findings from an exploratory, place specific study of the relationship between vi...
This paper analyzed the spatial patterns of four types of crime (assault, robbery, autotheft, and bu...