1 / 13

CRIME, DISORDER AND INEQUALITY

CRIME, DISORDER AND INEQUALITY. Anthony Bottoms Sheffield Fairness Commission 26 June 2012. ECONOMIC DEPRIVATION IN SHEFFIELD, 2000. OFFENDER RESIDENCES IN SHEFFIELD, SEPT 2004 – AUG 2006 (in quintiles, highest rate darkest). RECORDED VICTIMISATIONS FOR RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY IN SHEFFIELD,

winola
Download Presentation

CRIME, DISORDER AND INEQUALITY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CRIME, DISORDER AND INEQUALITY Anthony Bottoms Sheffield Fairness Commission 26 June 2012

  2. ECONOMIC DEPRIVATION IN SHEFFIELD, 2000

  3. OFFENDER RESIDENCES IN SHEFFIELD, SEPT 2004 – AUG 2006 (in quintiles, highest rate darkest)

  4. RECORDED VICTIMISATIONS FOR RESIDENTIAL BURGLARY IN SHEFFIELD, SEPT 2004 – AUG 2006 (in quintiles, highest rate darkest)

  5. Explaining Offender Residential Patterns Source: Breaking Rules, Fig. 5.6, p. 238

  6. Explaining Offence Locations Source: Breaking Rules, Fig. 5.2, p. 220

  7. COLLECTIVE EFFICACY Definition: ‘The institutional ability to achieve what a group or community collectively wishes to achieve’ In criminological research, measured by: • The willingness of residents to intervene for the common good in defined situations (e.g. children spray-painting graffiti); and • The existence or otherwise of conditions of cohesion and mutual trust among neighbours.

  8. The Interaction between Propensity and Environment Source: Breaking Rules, Fig. 3.11, p. 156

  9. Martin Innes’s“Signal Crimes Perspective” • Signal Crimes • Signal Disorders • Control Signals Source: Innes (2004) Central proposition: Some crime and disorder incidents matter more than others to people in terms of shaping their risk perceptions Detailed concepts:

  10. National Reassurance Policing Project:Top ‘Risk Signals’ in Trial Wards Source: University of Surrey * Crime or disorder signals are listed in descending order of perceived importance in each area.

  11. Study of ‘Satisfaction with Neighbourhood Safety’ in Four Sub-Areas in Sheffield Key variables: • Area not seen as declining • High score on ‘community works together’ scale • Recently seen PC on foot • Knows of local crime prevention programme • Quality of local services scale Source: Bottoms and Wilson (2007) Table 4.11, p. 80

  12. REFERENCES Bottoms, A. E. (2012) ‘Developing Socio-Spatial Criminology’ in M. Maguire, R. Morgan and R. Reiner (eds) The Oxford Handbook of Criminology, 5th ed., Oxford University Press. Bottoms, A. E. and Wilson, A. (2007) ‘Civil Renewal, Control Signals and Neighbourhood Safety’ in T. Brannan, P. John and G. Slater (eds) Re-energising Citizenship: Strategies for Civil Renewal, Palgrave Macmillan. Innes, M. (2004) ‘Signal Crimes and Signal Disorders: notes on deviance as communicative action’, British Journal of Sociology, 55, 335-355. Wikström, P-O, Oberwittler, D., Treiber, K. and Hardie, B. (2012) Breaking Rules: The Social and Situational Dynamics of Young People’s Urban Crime, Oxford University Press.

More Related