Given that crime events exhibit both a spatial and a temporal pattern, this study explores whether certain social and physical environment characteristics have varying relationships with crime at different times of day. The study uses a flexible nonlinear parametric approach on a large sample of street segments (and surrounding spatial area) in Southern California. The…Continue Reading Lab publication on temporal crime patterns
Category: Publications
Lab publication on third places and cohesion
Though Ray Oldenburg’s (1989) notion of “third places”, or places conducive to sociality outside of the realms of home and work, has received both scholarly and popular attention over the past several decades, many of the author’s central claims remain empirically untested. The present study considers the association between neighborhood third places, cohesion and neighbor…Continue Reading Lab publication on third places and cohesion
Lab publication on parks and crime
Although neighborhood studies often focus on the presence of some particular entity and its consequences for a variety of local processes, a frequent limitation is the failure to account more broadly for the local context. This paper therefore examines the role of parks for community crime, but contributes to the literature by testing whether the…Continue Reading Lab publication on parks and crime
Lab publication on Drug Activity and Crime Rates
To take stock of the neighborhood effects of drug activity, we combined theoretical insights from the drugs and crime and communities and place literatures in examining the longitudinal relationship between drug activity and crime rates at more spatially and temporally precise levels of granularity, with blocks as the spatial units and months as the temporal…Continue Reading Lab publication on Drug Activity and Crime Rates
Lab publication on Latent Classes of Neighborhood Change, and Consequences for Crime in Southern California Neighborhoods
This study explored the dynamic nature of neighborhoods using a relatively novel approach and data source. By using a nonparametric holistic approach of neighborhood change based on latent class analysis (LCA), we have explored how changes in the socio-demographic characteristics of residents, as well as home improvement and refinance activity by residents, are related to…Continue Reading Lab publication on Latent Classes of Neighborhood Change, and Consequences for Crime in Southern California Neighborhoods