Burglary
DNA and Property Crimes
Improving Forensic Responses to Residential Burglaries: Results of a Randomized Controlled Field Trial
Statistical Approach to Crime Linkage
Natural Surveillance Characteristics of Building Openings and Relationship to Residential Burglary
Quantifying Crime Prevention Potential of Near-Repeat Burglary
Using Citizen Notification To Interrupt Near-Repeat Residential Burglary Patterns: the Micro-Level Near-Repeat Experiment
Explaining Repeat Residential Burglaries: An Analysis of Property Stolen (From Repeat Victimization, P 119-132, 2001, Graham Farrell and Ken Pease, eds. -- See NCJ-189391)
Impact of Economic Conditions on Robbery and Property Crime: The Role of Consumer Sentiment
Criminal Victimization, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder, and Comorbid Psychopathology Among a Community Sample of Women
WHO BUYS STOLEN PROPERTY? A NEW LOOK AT CRIMINAL RECEIVING
How Residential Burglars Choose Targets: An Ethnographic Analysis
DNA Field Experiment: A Randomized Trial of the Cost-Effectiveness of Using DNA to Solve Property Crimes
DNA Solves Property Crimes (But Are We Ready for That?)
Willingness-To-Pay for Crime Control Programs
Age-by-Race Specific Crime Rates: 1965-1985 - A User's Guide to the Machine-Readable Files and Documentation and Original Codebook
Influence of Crack Cocaine on Robbery, Burglary, and Homicide Rates: A Cross-City, Longitudinal Analysis
Partially Supervised Spatiotemporal Clustering for Burglary Crime Series Identification
Violent Repeat Victimization: Prospects and Challenges for Research and Practice
Research tells us that a relatively small fraction of individuals experience a large proportion of violent victimizations. Thus, focusing on reducing repeat victimization might have a large impact on total rates of violence. However, research also tells us that most violent crime victims do not experience more than one incident during a six-month or one-year time period. As a result, special policies to prevent repeat violence may not be cost-effective for most victims.
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Economical Crime Control: Perspectives from Both Sides of the Ledger
The surge in incarceration since 1980 has been fueled in part by the mistaken belief that the population can be divided neatly into "good guys" and "bad guys." In fact, crime rates are not determined by the number of at-large criminals, any more than farm production is determined by the number of farmers. Crime is a choice, a choice that is influenced by available opportunities as much as by character. This perspective, drawn from economic theory, supports a multi-faceted approach to crime control. Dr.
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