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  2. Crime mapping - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_mapping

    Crime mapping is used by analysts in law enforcement agencies to map, visualize, and analyze crime incident patterns. It is a key component of crime analysis and the CompStat policing strategy. Mapping crime, using Geographic Information Systems (GIS), allows crime analysts to identify crime hot spots , along with other trends and patterns.

  3. Crime hotspots - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_hotspots

    First, crime incidents are geocoded on a map, and then the distance between one crime incident and its neighbor is calculated. Following that all the distances are added up and divided by the number of crime incidents on the map. According to Eck et al. (2005) this value is called the observed average nearest neighbor distance. Then a map of ...

  4. CompStat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CompStat

    CompStat is a management system created in April 1994 by Bill Bratton and Jack Maple, whom Bratton met while he was chief of the New York City Transit Police and later hired as the New York Police Department's top anti-crime specialist when he became Police Commissioner in 1993. [1]

  5. A Path Out Of Trouble - The Huffington Post

    data.huffingtonpost.com/2016/school-police/new...

    School districts around the country are being accused of funneling kids from schools to juvenile jails at an alarming clip, but Connecticut has worked hard in recent years to reverse course. The state consolidated everything related to youth crime under one roof and passed a series of laws during the 2000s to reduce the number of incarcerated ...

  6. Crime pattern theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_pattern_theory

    Crime pattern theory is a way of explaining why people commit crimes in certain areas.. Crime is not random, it is either planned or opportunistic. [citation needed]According to the theory crime happens when the activity space of a victim or target intersects with the activity space of an offender.

  7. Social disorganization theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_disorganization_theory

    Social disorganization theory is a theory of criminology that was established in 1929 by Clifford Shaw and published in 1942 with his assistant Henry McKay.It is used to describe crime and delinquency in urban North American cities, it suggests that communities characterized by socioeconomic status, ethnic heterogeneity, and residential mobility are impeded from organizing to realize the ...

  8. CrimeView - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CrimeView

    CrimeView connects to an agency's existing crime records or reporting system and automatically converts tabular data into locations on a map. Many police departments use CrimeView as part of their CompStat process and Watch Commanders utilize the software in order to help determine the placement of officers in the field.

  9. Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Planck_Institute_for...

    The associated normative challenges of danger prevention are analyzed in terms of the protection of basic rights and the principles of rule of law and democracy. The research program of the Department of Criminology focuses on the theoretical and empirical explanations for conforming and deviant behavior.