The spatial distribution of crime has been a long-standing interest in the field of criminology. Research in this area has shown that activity nodes and travel paths are key components that help to define patterns of offending. Little research, however, has considered the influence of activity nodes on the spatial distribution of crimes in crime neutral areas - those where crimes are more haphazardly dispersed. Further, a review of the literature has revealed a lack of research in determining the relative strength of attraction that different types of activity nodes possess based on characteristics of criminal events in their immediate surrounds. In this paper we use offenders' home locations and the locations of their crimes to define dire...
This paper extends Crime Pattern Theory, proposing a theoretical framework which aims to explain how...
The dissertation examined how land uses, street network connectivity, and physical boundaries in urb...
Objectives: Given the spatial nature of offender and target behavior, what do standard ecological st...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders’ crimes ...
Originally presented in the 2012 European Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference (Odense, ...
According to Crime Pattern Theory, individuals all have routine daily activities which require frequ...
Explaining why crime is spatially concentrated has been a central theme of much criminological resea...
I propose a general theory for examining the spatial distribution of crime by specifically addressin...
Crime analysis is of upcoming importance for both theory and practice in criminology. The study of o...
In crime investigations, geographic profiling involves inferring information about ‘whodunit’ from i...
Crime pattern theory is a central framework within environmental criminology, providing a means to u...
Originally appeared in the 2011 European Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference (12-14 Sep...
Crime has been previously explained by social characteristics of the residential population and, as ...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders ’ crimes...
Geographic profiling is a methodology used to delineate a prior search area for a serial offender. ...
This paper extends Crime Pattern Theory, proposing a theoretical framework which aims to explain how...
The dissertation examined how land uses, street network connectivity, and physical boundaries in urb...
Objectives: Given the spatial nature of offender and target behavior, what do standard ecological st...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders’ crimes ...
Originally presented in the 2012 European Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference (Odense, ...
According to Crime Pattern Theory, individuals all have routine daily activities which require frequ...
Explaining why crime is spatially concentrated has been a central theme of much criminological resea...
I propose a general theory for examining the spatial distribution of crime by specifically addressin...
Crime analysis is of upcoming importance for both theory and practice in criminology. The study of o...
In crime investigations, geographic profiling involves inferring information about ‘whodunit’ from i...
Crime pattern theory is a central framework within environmental criminology, providing a means to u...
Originally appeared in the 2011 European Intelligence and Security Informatics Conference (12-14 Sep...
Crime has been previously explained by social characteristics of the residential population and, as ...
Objectives: The main objective of this study was to see if the characteristics of offenders ’ crimes...
Geographic profiling is a methodology used to delineate a prior search area for a serial offender. ...
This paper extends Crime Pattern Theory, proposing a theoretical framework which aims to explain how...
The dissertation examined how land uses, street network connectivity, and physical boundaries in urb...
Objectives: Given the spatial nature of offender and target behavior, what do standard ecological st...