Buch, Englisch, 520 Seiten, Gewicht: 1038 g
Reihe: International Library of Criminology, Criminal Justice and Penology - Second Series
Buch, Englisch, 520 Seiten, Gewicht: 1038 g
Reihe: International Library of Criminology, Criminal Justice and Penology - Second Series
ISBN: 978-0-7546-2596-4
Verlag: Routledge
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Contents: Introduction; Part I Burglary: Risk and Impact: Repeat victimisation: offender accounts, Julie Ashton, Imogen Brown, Barbara Senior and Ken Pease; Prospective hot-spotting: the future of crime mapping?, Kate J. Bowers, Shane D. Johnson and Ken Pease; Residential burglary in the United States: life-style and demographic factors associated with the probability of victimization, Lawrence E. Cohen and David Cantor; The rational and opportunistic burglar, Paul F. Cromwell, James N. Olsen and D'Aunn Wester Avary; The effect of criminal victimization on a household's moving decision, Laura Duggan; Ecological and behavioral influences on property victimization at home: implications for opportunity theory, James P. Lynch and David Cantor; The impact of burglary upon victims, Mike Maguire; The impact of burglary: a tale of 2 cities, R.I. Mawby and S. Walklate; Residential burglary in the Republic of Ireland: a situational perspective, C. Nee and M. Taylor; State differences in burglary victimisation in Australia: a research note, Timothy Phillips and John Walker; The time course of repeat burglary victimisation, Natalie Polvi, Terah Looman, Charlie Humphries and Ken Pease; Burglary revictimisation: the time period of heightened risk, Matthew B. Robinson; Burglary victimization, perceptions of crime risk and routine activities: a multilevel analysis across Seattle neighborhoods and census tracts, Pamela Wilcox Rountree and Kenneth C. Land; Repeat burglary victimization: spatial and temporal patterns, Michael Townsley, Ross Homel and Janet Chaseling; Property crime victimisation: the roles of individual and area influences, Alan Trickett, Denise R. Osborn and Dan Ellingworth; Commercial burglars in the Netherlands: reasoning decision-makers?, Eric Wiersma; A snowball's chance in hell: doing fieldwork with active residential burglars, Richard Wright, Scott H. Decker, Allison K. Redfern and Dietrich L. Smith; How young house burglars choose their targets, Richard Wright and Robert H. Logie. Part II Policy Response: Small business crime; the evaluation of a crime prevention initiative, Kate J. Bowers; Critically reviewing the theory and practice of secured-by-design for residential new-build housing in Britain, P.M. Cozens, T. Pascoe and D. Hillier; Solving residential burglary, Timothy Coupe and Max Griffiths; Safer cities and domestic burglary, Paul Ekblom, Ho Law and Mike Sutton; Helping the victims, Martyn J. Gay, Christopher Holton and M.S. Thomas; Police response to crime: the perceptions of victims from 2 Polish cities, R.I. Mawby, Z. Ostrihanska and D. Wojcik; House burglaries and victims, D. Nation and J. Arnott; Private cops on the block: a review of the role of private security in residential communities, Lesley Noakes; The Kirkholt project: preventing burglary on a British public housing estate, Ken Pease; The theory and research behind Neighbourhood Watch: is it a sound fear and crime reduction strategy?, Dennis P. Rosenbaum; Name index.