Eight years of homicide evolution in Monterrey, Mexico: a network approach
Homicide is without doubt one of Mexico's most important security problems, with data showing that this dismal kind of violence sky-rocketed shortly after the war on drugs was declared in 2007. Since then, violent war-like zones have appeared and disappeared throughout Mexico, causing unfathoma...
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Zusammenfassung: | Homicide is without doubt one of Mexico's most important security problems,
with data showing that this dismal kind of violence sky-rocketed shortly after
the war on drugs was declared in 2007. Since then, violent war-like zones have
appeared and disappeared throughout Mexico, causing unfathomable human, social
and economic losses. One of the most emblematic of these zones is the city of
Monterrey, a central scenario in the narco-war. To better understand the
underlying mechanisms by which violence has evolved and spread through the
city, here we propose a network-based approach. For this purpose, we define a
homicide network where nodes are geographical entities that are connected
through spatial proximity and crime similarity. Data is taken from a crime
database spanning 86 months in the Monterrey metropolitan area, containing
manually curated geo-located and dated homicides, as well as from Open Street
Map for urban environment. Under this approach, we first identify independent
crime sectors corresponding to different connected components. Each of these
clusters of crime presents crime evolution similar to the one at state and
national levels. We then show how crime spread from neighborhood to adjacent
neighborhoods when violence was mainly cartel-related and how it was chiefly
static at a different time. Finally, we show a relation between homicidal crime
and urban landscape by studying the distance of safe and violent neighborhoods
to the closest highway and by studying the evolution of highway and crime
distance over the cartel-related years and the following period. With this
approach, we are able to describe more accurately the evolution of homicidal
crime in a metropolitan area. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2009.04671 |