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Policing Hot Spots of Crime [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 438 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 453 g, 64 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 13 Halftones, black and white; 15 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Advances in Police Theory and Practice
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032872853
  • ISBN-13: 9781032872858
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  • Formaat: Hardback, 438 pages, kõrgus x laius: 254x178 mm, kaal: 453 g, 64 Tables, black and white; 2 Line drawings, black and white; 13 Halftones, black and white; 15 Illustrations, black and white
  • Sari: Advances in Police Theory and Practice
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Apr-2026
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1032872853
  • ISBN-13: 9781032872858

This volume provides a broad framework for understanding hot spots policing in the context of contributions by Professor David Weisburd, recipient of the Stockholm Prize in Criminology for his work in this area.



This volume provides a broad framework for understanding hot spots policing in the context of contributions by Professor David Weisburd, recipient of the Stockholm Prize in Criminology for his work in this area.

The book aims to bring together a wide array of studies that are seldom integrated into a broad general argument about why hot spots policing “makes sense,” why police agencies should be implementing this approach, and how police reform can be integrated into their efforts. In the 21st century, a series of rigorous evaluations of hot spots policing overturned the widespread assumption that the police could not prevent crime. Today, there is wide agreement that when the police focus on crimes clustered in individual locations, often called microgeographic units or hot spots, they can be effective in preventing and controlling crime. This collection examines the history of the development of the idea of crime hot spots and evidence of crime concentrations at place that underlie hot spots policing. It also presents key experimental studies that show that hot spots policing works, and that it did not simply lead to displacement of crime. Finally, the volume addresses how police reform can be integrated into hot spots policing.

Of interest to a wide range of criminologists and policing scholars, this volume brings together and synthesizes the evidence supporting a focus on hot spots to prevent crime.

Arvustused

This is an incredibly important collection of scientific works and essays. Weisburd presents a powerful narrative on how practical criminological theories, the willingness of police departments to experiment with new crime preventions ideas, and persistence of a small group of scholars can shift scientific paradigms and policy conversations. The nearly four decades of hot spots policing research and development efforts led by Weisburd and his colleagues obliterated status quo narratives that police do not prevent crime, place-based crime prevention leads to crime displacement, and policing harms rather than helps communities. The world is a safer and fairer place because of the work presented here. This book should be mandatory reading for police executives, mayors and city managers, scholars, and students interested in effective crime prevention policy and practice.

Anthony A. Braga, University of Pennsylvania

Professor Weisburd has curated a wonderful and deeply thoughtful collection of papers for a book that spans both the history and future of crime hotspots and evidence to guide policing best practice. An anthology of this kind could only ever come from Weisburd and his teams of students and colleagues bringing together over nearly four decades of careful research and scholarly insight. With clear historical recollections of how the law of crime concentration emerged and how this law must be understood and acted upon by police, Weisburd and Cody Teleps conclusion charts the way forward for future research, policy and practice considering the big science approach for making our streets, communities and cities safer for generations to come.



Lorraine Mazerolle AC, The University of Queensland

Part I: The Origins of Hot Spots Policing
1. Small Worlds of Crime and
Justice Interventions: Discovering Crime Hot Spots
2. Hot Spots of Crime and
Place-Based Prevention Part II: The Law of Crime Concentration
3. The Law of
Crime Concentration and Criminology of Place
4. Crime concentrations at micro
places: A review of the evidence Part III: Hot Spots of Crime
5. Its Not as
Bad as People Think the Place Is: The Potential for Informal Social Control
at Crime Hot Spots
6. Hot Spots of Crime Are Not Just Hot Spots of Crime:
Examining Health Outcomes at Street Segments
7. The Relationship Between
Social Disorganization and Crime at the Micro Geographic Level: Findings from
Tel Aviv-Yafo Using Israeli Census Data
8. Does Collective Efficacy Matter at
the Micro Geographic Level? Findings From a Study of Street Segments Part IV:
Hot Spots Policing
9. General Deterrent Effects of Police Patrol in Crime
HOT SPOTS: A Randomized, Controlled Trial
10. Policing Drug Hot Spots: The
Jersey City Drug Market Analysis Experiment
11. Does Hot Spots Policing Have
Meaningful Impacts on Crime? Findings from an Alternative Approach to
Estimating Effect Sizes from Place-Based Program Evaluations
12. Does Crime
Just Move Around the Corner? A Controlled Study of Spatial Displacement and
Diffusion of Crime Control Benefits
13. Can Hot Spots Policing Reduce Crime
In Urban Areas? An Agent-Based Simulation Part V: Hot Spots Policing and
Police Reform
14. Does Hot Spots Policing Inevitably Lead to Unfair and
Abusive Police Practices, or Can We Maximize Both Fairness and Effectiveness
in the New Proactive Policing?
15. Building collective action at crime hot
spots: Findings from a randomized field experiment
16. Reforming the police
through procedural justice training: A multicity randomized trial at crime
hot spots Part VI: Conclusions
17. Hot Spots Policing: What We Know and What
We Need to Know
David Weisburd is Distinguished Professor of Criminology, Law and Society at George Mason University and Executive Director of the Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy. He is also the Walter E. Meyer Professor Emeritus of Law and Criminal Justice at the Hebrew University Faculty of Law in Jerusalem. He serves as Chief Science Adviser at the National Policing Institute.