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GeoCriminology

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Mainstream Criminology has focused on explaining the causes of crime, the ... on the offender, attention is being directed toward those criminogenic factors ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GeoCriminology


1
GeoCriminology
2
Outline
  • Traditional Criminology vs. GeoCriminology
  • What is GeoCriminology
  • GeoCriminological Correlates of Crime
  • Evolution of GeoCriminology?
  • Theoretical Developments
  • Policy Implications

3
Traditional Criminology vs. GeoCriminology
  • Mainstream Criminology has focused on explaining
    the causes of crime, the relationship between law
    and behavior, victimization, the interaction of
    criminal justice system components. In other
    words, the primary focus has been on the
    offenders, victims, the law, and the system.
  • A parallel perspective that recently is gaining
    considerable attention is GeoCriminology. Rather
    than an intense focus on the offender, attention
    is being directed toward those criminogenic
    factors in the environment that make some places
    hot beds of crime, and other locations buffered
    safe havens.

4
Traditional Criminology
  • Individual Theories of Crime
  • Micro level theoretical perspectives that examine
    individual correlates of crime personality,
    intelligence, child rearing, frustration-aggressio
    n, rate of maturation, biological factors
    genetics, diet, hormones (Banduras Social
    Learning Theory, Psychodynamic Theory, A B
    PIC-R, Biological theories)
  • Structural and Processural Theories of Crime
  • Theoretical perspectives that examine the
    relationship between societys social structure
    and culture and how this relationship is mediated
    by socialization and other developmental
    processes friendship networks, social class,
    informal and formal control levels, child parent
    relationships, social bonds (Social
    Disorganization, Differential Social
    Organization, Social Control, Differential
    Association, General Strain Theory)

5
Traditional Criminology, contd.
  • Conflict and Marxist Theories of Crime
  • Theoretical perspectives that explore how
    economic factors, unemployment, poverty,
    mobility, power differentials, social threat and
    its relationship to control, and other macro
    level correlates affect societal crime rates
    Contributions by Kornhauser, Messner and
    Rosenfeld, Chamlin, Cochran, Spitzer, Tittle,
    Liska, Marx
  • Integrated and Lifecourse Theories
  • Theoretical perspectives that explore the
    interaction between criminological correlates
    (macro and micro) from many disciplines, as well
    as, the impact of life events on individuals over
    the course of their lifetime Gluecks research,
    Sampson and Laub, Gottfredson and Hirschi,
    Thornberry, Mazerolle, Moffit and many others.

6
What is GeoCriminology
  • Keywords environmental criminology, crime and
    place, ecology of crime
  • Df developing theoretical tradition that
    explores the impact of features and facilities on
    crime and examines the clustering of behaviors
    temporally and spatially
  • Df the study and research on the spatial and
    temporal dimensions of crime

7
What is GeoCriminology, contd.
  • Features and facilities?
  • Physical Factors, Structural Factors, Social
    Milieu?
  • EXAMPLES?
  • How is crime distributed temporally, what
    temporal dimensions influence crime
    distributions?
  • How is crime distributed spatially, what spatial
    dimensions influence crime distributions?

8
Temporal Distribution - factors involved?
9
How would we expect crime to be distributed
spatially across the United States (i.e.,
population, age, gender, race)?
10
Total Population Proportion Population by Area
11
Gender Proportion Male by Area
12
Race Proportion African American by Area
13
Age Proportion Aged 18_29 by Area
14
Renters Proportion of Rental Properties by
State
15
Regional Crime Rate 1997
16
How would we expect crime to be distributed
spatially across Florida (i.e., population, age,
gender, race)?
17
Total Population Proportion Population by Area
18
Gender Proportion Male by Area
19
Race Proportion African American by Area
20
Age Proportion Aged 18_29 by Area
21
Crime Rate by County
1997
1997
 
22
Drug/Prost 600 am
23
Drug/Prost 1200 pm
24
Drug/Prost 1600 pm
25
Drug/Prost 1000 pm
26
Drug/Prost 200 am
27
Evolutionary Developmentreducing the level of
resolution
  • Early French Scholars (Guerry and Quetelet)
  • Police Precincts, Urban Areas, Regional
    Differences
  • Early English Scholars (Mayhew and Tobias)
  • Variation within regions, rookeries
  • 1940s-1950s (Chicago School)
  • Variation within cities, migration and city
    growth patterns
  • 1960s 1970s (Jacobs, Angel, Jeffery, Newman)
  • Building layouts, architectural designs, street
    patterns
  • 1980s (Brantinghams and Taylor
  • Began to focus heavily on behavioral settings,
    places
  • 1990s Present (Sherman, Eck, Taylor,
    Brantingham)
  • Hot spots, blocks, face blocks, intersections,
    land parcels)

28
Theoretical Development
  • CPTED (crime prevention through environmental
    design)
  • Jeffery, Crowe
  • Defensible Space
  • Oscar Newman, Jacobs
  • Social Disorganization Theory (some say)
  • Shaw and McKay, Bursik,
  • Routine Activities Theory
  • Cohen and Felson, Eck
  • Lifestyle Theory
  • Garofolo et al.
  • Crime Pattern Theory/Hotspot Analysis
  • Sherman, Eck, Taylor

29
Policy Implications?
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