Crime, Policing and Place

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BCS
BCS Report
british
Category=JKVC
Come Wi Th
Community Crime Career
Crime Prevention
criminal geography
criminology
distr
environmental
Environmental Criminology
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Home Office Crime Prevention Unit
Home Office's Crime Prevention
Home Security Surveys
ibution
Internal Revenue Service
islington
Islington Crime Survey
Lay Visitors
Lay Visitors Scheme
Left Realism
multi-agency collaboration
neighbourhood
Neighbourhood Watch Schemes
PCCs
policing strategies
prevention
Proport Ion
Residential Burglars
Safer Cities Programme
Shift Share Analysis
Situational Prevention
social policy analysis
spatial analysis of crime distribution
spatial crime patterns
Street Prostitution
survey
Tory Councillors
urban safety research
watch
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415049900
  • Weight: 544g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Mar 1992
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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First published in 2002. Spiralling crime rates and continuing public concern about police-community relations ensure that crime and policing remain firmly on the social and political agenda. An awareness of crime continues to affect the lives of ordinary people and also to stimulate policy makers who recognise that crime rates form one of the principles by which their effectiveness is judged. Of the many agencies involved in the battle against crime, the police in their various roles constitute the most obvious front line.
Drawing on case material from Britain, Europe, Canada and America, Crime, Policing and Place examines the significance of spatial patterns of crime and the processes which produce them. The book analyses the implications of theoretical and methodological innovation in the study of crime and policing, the processes which underlie the uneven distribution and impact of crime and the success of recent policies aimed at preventing crime and enhancing police-community relations.
Contributors are drawn from a variety of academic disciplines, including criminology, geography and social policy and also from the police and government agencies with direct policy input.

David Evans is Senior Lecturer in Geography at Staffordshire Polytechnic.
Nicholas Fyfe is Lecturer in Geography at Strathclyde University.
David Herbert is Professor of Geography at the University College of Swansea.