Crime Prevention, Punishment and Victimisation Flashcards
Who defined situational crime prevention and what is this?
Clarke
it is concerned with preventing crime in particular locations, it aims to make crime less attractive and more difficult to commit, since crime is motivated by rational choice weighing up costs and benefits, making opportunities for crime more difficult and designing out crime is the solution
Who gives a good example of situational crime prevention and what is this example?
Felson - The Port Authority Bus Terminal was poorly designed in New York and provided opportunities for rough sleeping, drug dealing and other deviance. Re-shaping reduced it, for example large sinks homeless people bathed in were replaced with smaller ones.
How does Chaiken criticise situational crime prevention?
Does not stop crime but displaces it, if crime is rational then target hardening will result in moving where targets are softer. For example the New York subway crackdown led to more crime on the street above
Who argues that situational crime prevent can have positive effects beyond location and who confirmed this with an example?
Felson and Clarke
Bowers found that targeted policing in high crime areas lead to a ‘diffusion of benefits’.
Who argues that situational crime prevent can have positive effects beyond location and who confirmed this with an example?
Felson and Clarke
Bowers found that targeted policing in high crime areas lead to a ‘diffusion of benefits’ with neighboring districts also seeing reductions in crime since people start to see legitimate opportunities as more appealing as they are unsure of the scope of police operations.
Who came up with the broken window theory and what is this?
Wilson and Kelling used the phrase ‘broken windows’ to describe signs of disorder such as littering and vandalism. Leaving broken windows unrepaired sends a signal that nobody cares. In such neighborhoods there is a lack of formal and informal social control, the police are only concerned with serious crime and respectable members of the community move out it becomes an attractive are to deviance
What do Wilson and Kelling propose is the solution for ‘broken window’ neighborhoods? And what example do they give?
environmental achievement strategy - any broken window must be repaired immediately otherwise more follows and ares go downhill. They propose zero tolerance policies which means police must tackle even the slightest sign of disorder which prevents serious crime taking root.
The New York Clean Car program where cars were taken out of service if gratited, graffiti was largely removed from the subway and other crack downs in the city led to a 50% drop in homicides and fall in crime rate
What are the arguments against Wilson and Kelling’s example of the New York Clean Car program bringing down crime levels?
it could have been that the zero tolerance policy wasn’t responsible because at the same time there was a 7000 increase in police officers, the country was coming out of recession and there was a decline of availability of cocaine. Attempted homicides remained high so less death could have been to medical improvements
What is social and community crime prevention
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What does social and community crime prevention aim to achieve?
It aims to remove conditions that predispose individuals to crime like poverty and unemployment
Give an example of social and community crime prevention and what were the results of the programme?
Perry pre-school project for disadvantaged black children - an experimental group completed a two year intellectual programme, by the age of 40 they had fewer lifetime arrests for violent crime, property crime and drugs, more had graduated from school and were employed. For ever $1 spent on the programme $17 were saved on welfare and prison.
What did Whyte say about the types of crime
ls
What did Whyte say about the types of crime that social and community prevention targeted in 2001?
Only street crime, disregarding crimes of the powerful
In 2001 how many waste offences and water quality offences did the Environment agency prosecute?
62 and 32
Who argues that police clear up acts are too low to act as deterrent and police spend too little time investigating crime, losing support which means that the flow of information dries up so they rely on military style policing which alienates communities.
They argue the public need to be more involved in deciding policing styles and priorities since 90% of crimes known to police are reported by the public.
Kinsey, Lea and Young
Who argued that one of the major factors between riots in English cities in 2011 was resentment at police, lack of respect from them and innocents being repeatedly stopped and searched.
Lewis
Who argued tat surveillance is penetrating into more private aspects of people’s lives with CCTV which monitors innocents movement to
Foucault
How many cameras did the 2013 British Security Industry Authority estimate there was across Britain and 1 for every how many people?
5 million
1 for every 13 people