
@article{ref1,
title="Crime Attractors, Generators and Detractors: Land Use and Urban Crime Opportunities",
journal="Built environment (1978)",
year="2008",
author="Kinney, J. Bryan and Brantingham, Patricia L. and Wuschke, Kathryn and Kirk, Michael G. and Brantingham, Paul Jeffrey",
volume="34",
number="1",
pages="62-74",
abstract="The built environment impacts on the patterns of crime in many different ways. The distribution and clustering of different land uses is thought, on theoretical grounds, to play an important role in where and when crimes occur. This study analysed the patterns of assault and motor vehicle theft in relation to the distribution of land uses across more than 60,000 separate parcels of land in a large British Columbia city. Specific land-use types that concentrate routine human activities in time and space are found to act as major crime generators and attractors. Attention to the distribution of these land-use types across the urban mosaic can substantially reduce the volume of crime associated with design decisions.<p />",
language="",
issn="0263-7960",
doi="10.2148/benv.34.1.62",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.2148/benv.34.1.62"
}