Nonlinear Dynamics of Crime and Violence in Urban Settings

We perform analysis of data on crime and violence for 5,660 U.S. cities over the period of 2005-2009 and uncover the following trends: 1) The proportion of law enforcement officers required to maintain a steady low level of criminal activity increases with the size of the population of the city; 2)...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of artificial societies and social simulation 2012-01, Vol.15 (1)
Hauptverfasser: Fonoberova, Maria, Fonoberov, Vladimir A, Mezic, Igor, Mezic, Jadranka, Brantingham, P Jeffrey
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container_title Journal of artificial societies and social simulation
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creator Fonoberova, Maria
Fonoberov, Vladimir A
Mezic, Igor
Mezic, Jadranka
Brantingham, P Jeffrey
description We perform analysis of data on crime and violence for 5,660 U.S. cities over the period of 2005-2009 and uncover the following trends: 1) The proportion of law enforcement officers required to maintain a steady low level of criminal activity increases with the size of the population of the city; 2) The number of criminal/violent events per 1,000 inhabitants of a city shows non-monotonic behavior with size of the population. We construct a dynamical model allowing for system-level, mechanistic understanding of these trends. In our model the level of rational behavior of individuals in the population is encoded into each citizen's perceived risk function. We find strong dependence on size of the population, which leads to partially irrational behavior on the part of citizens. The nature of violence changes from global outbursts of criminal/violent activity in small cities to spatio-temporally distributed, decentralized outbursts of activity in large cities, indicating that in order to maintain peace, bigger cities need larger ratio of law enforcement officers than smaller cities. We also observe existence of tipping points for communities of all sizes in the model: reducing the number of law enforcement officers below a critical level can rapidly increase the incidence of criminal/violent activity. Though surprising, these trends are in agreement with the data. Adapted from the source document.
doi_str_mv 10.18564/jasss.1921
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source DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Anthropology
Cities
Citizens
Crime
Crime Rates
Global Cities
Police
Risk
U.S.A
Urban Crime
Urban environment
Violence
title Nonlinear Dynamics of Crime and Violence in Urban Settings
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