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The scaling of crime concentration in cities

Author

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  • Marcos Oliveira
  • Carmelo Bastos-Filho
  • Ronaldo Menezes

Abstract

Crime is a major threat to society’s well-being but lacks a statistical characterization that could lead to uncovering some of its underlying mechanisms. Evidence of nonlinear scaling of urban indicators in cities, such as wages and serious crime, has motivated the understanding of cities as complex systems—a perspective that offers insights into resources limits and sustainability, but that usually neglects details of the indicators themselves. Notably, since the nineteenth century, criminal activities have been known to occur unevenly within a city; crime concentrates in such way that most of the offenses take place in few regions of the city. Though confirmed by different studies, this concentration lacks broad analyses on its characteristics, which hinders not only the comprehension of crime dynamics but also the proposal of sounding counter-measures. Here, we developed a framework to characterize crime concentration which divides cities into regions with the same population size. We used disaggregated criminal data from 25 locations in the U.S. and the U.K., spanning from 2 to 15 years of longitudinal data. Our results confirmed that crime concentrates regardless of city and revealed that the level of concentration does not scale with city size. We found that the distribution of crime in a city can be approximated by a power-law distribution with exponent α that depends on the type of crime. In particular, our results showed that thefts tend to concentrate more than robberies, and robberies more than burglaries. Though criminal activities present regularities of concentration, we found that criminal ranks have the tendency to change continuously over time—features that support the perspective of crime as a complex system and demand analyses and evolving urban policies covering the city as a whole.

Suggested Citation

  • Marcos Oliveira & Carmelo Bastos-Filho & Ronaldo Menezes, 2017. "The scaling of crime concentration in cities," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 12(8), pages 1-13, August.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0183110
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0183110
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    Cited by:

    1. Wenhan Feng & Bayi Li & Zebin Chen & Peng Liu, 2021. "City size based scaling of the urban internal nodes layout," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 16(4), pages 1-16, April.
    2. Shino Shiode & Narushige Shiode, 2022. "Network-Based Space-Time Scan Statistics for Detecting Micro-Scale Hotspots," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 14(24), pages 1-20, December.
    3. Yusra Ghafoor & Yi-Shin Chen & Kuan-Ta Chen, 2019. "Social Interaction Scaling for Contact Networks," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 11(9), pages 1-14, May.

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