AbstractWe investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individuals’ participation in walking. For many adults walking is the only regular physical activity. We use a sample of nearly 1 million people in 323 small areas in England between 2005 and 2011 matched to quarterly crime data at the small area level. Within area variation identifies the causal effect of local violent crime on walking and a difference-in-difference analysis of two high-profile crimes corroborates our results. We find a significant deterrent effect of violent crime on walking that translates into a drop in overall physical activity
Background Numerous cross-sectional studies have investigated the premise that the perception of cri...
Background: A common hypothesis is that crime is a major barrier to physical activity, but research ...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...
AbstractWe investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individ...
We investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individuals’ pa...
We investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individuals’ pa...
Abstract Background Due to the inconsistent findings of prior studies, we explored the association o...
Interest in crime as a determinant of health has increased, yet with equivocal findings. Higher crim...
Few studies have simultaneously examined the relationship of levels of recorded crime, perceptions o...
BACKGROUND: Few studies have investigated associations between objectively measured crime and walkin...
Crime is one aspect of the environment that can act as a barrier to physical activity. The goals of ...
Crime is both a societal safety and public health issue. Examining different measures and aspects of...
Equivocal findings on crime as a deterrent for physical activity may be due to effects of geographic...
Equivocal findings on crime as a deterrent for physical activity may be due to effects of geographic...
Does a rise in crime result in increased sitting time and a reduction in physical activity? We used ...
Background Numerous cross-sectional studies have investigated the premise that the perception of cri...
Background: A common hypothesis is that crime is a major barrier to physical activity, but research ...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...
AbstractWe investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individ...
We investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individuals’ pa...
We investigate an underexplored externality of crime: the impact of violent crime on individuals’ pa...
Abstract Background Due to the inconsistent findings of prior studies, we explored the association o...
Interest in crime as a determinant of health has increased, yet with equivocal findings. Higher crim...
Few studies have simultaneously examined the relationship of levels of recorded crime, perceptions o...
BACKGROUND: Few studies have investigated associations between objectively measured crime and walkin...
Crime is one aspect of the environment that can act as a barrier to physical activity. The goals of ...
Crime is both a societal safety and public health issue. Examining different measures and aspects of...
Equivocal findings on crime as a deterrent for physical activity may be due to effects of geographic...
Equivocal findings on crime as a deterrent for physical activity may be due to effects of geographic...
Does a rise in crime result in increased sitting time and a reduction in physical activity? We used ...
Background Numerous cross-sectional studies have investigated the premise that the perception of cri...
Background: A common hypothesis is that crime is a major barrier to physical activity, but research ...
Crime rates have fallen dramatically over the past two decades. This phenomenon is typically referre...