Fr. 240.00

Patterns, Prevention, and Geometry of Crime

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Martin A. Andresen is Assistant Professor at Simon Fraser University, School of Criminology and Institute for Canadian Urban Research Studies. His research areas include: spatial statistical analysis, crime at places, and co-offending with recent research published in Annals of the Association of American Geographers, British Journal of Criminology, Environment and Planning, A European Journal of Criminology, European Sociological Review, and Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. J. Bryan Kinney is the Director of the Institute for Canadian Urban Research Studies (ICURS) Laboratory. In 2005 he received his PhD (Criminology) at Simon Fraser and joined the faculty of the School of Criminology in that same year, where he teaches graduate and undergraduate courses on environmental criminology, crime prevention, and crime analysis. Dr. Kinney's publications include work on crime and place, offender mobility, target selection and crime pattern analysis, and have appeared in The Built Environment, Crime Patterns and Analysis, and Security Journal. Beyond his continued interest in environmental criminology, his research interests include interdisciplinary projects involving computational criminology and criminal justice systems modeling. Klappentext This book gathers together leading scholars in the field of environmental criminology to honour the work of P&P Brantingham with new work on the geometry of crime, patterns in crime and crime generators and attractors. Zusammenfassung This book gathers together leading scholars in the field of environmental criminology to honour the work of P&P Brantingham with new work on the geometry of crime, patterns in crime and crime generators and attractors. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1. Editors' Introduction: Patterns, Prevention, and Geometry of Crime 2. Mobility Polygons and the Geometry of Co-Offending 3. Spatial-Temporal Crime Paths 4. The Edge of the Community: Drug Dealing in a Segregated Environment 5. Estimating the Number of U.S. Vehicles Stolen for Export Using Crime Location Quotients 6. Crime Patterns and Prolific Offending 7. Sleeping with Strangers: Hotels and Motels as Crime Attractors and Crime Generators 8. How Near is Near? Quantifying the Spatial Influence of Crime Attractors and Generators 9. Urban Backcloth and Regional Mobility Patterns as Indicators of Juvenile Crime 10 Spatial Interplay: Interaction of Land Uses in Relation to Crime Incidents Around Transit Stations 11. Letters to P. & P. Brantingham ...

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