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Crime Prevention (Social)
Picture
PictureGeorge Kelling
Background: How the features of neighbourhoods and a zero tolerance policy can influence crime.
Key Study: Wilson and Kelling (1982) The police and neighbourhood safety: Broken windows.
Strategy: Crime prevention

Sentence starters for prep can be found here
individual_situational_expl_prevention_of_crime.docx
File Size: 14 kb
File Type: docx
Download File

Picture
Background: Newman’s ‘defensible space’
  1. Zone of territorial influence – Markers like fences and hedges should indicate that areas are private rather than public.
  2. Opportunities for surveillance – Housing should be designed so that people entering a communal area can be easily spotted and identified (e.g. designing housing around courtyards). Fewer residents to an estate means that it is easier to spot intruders.
  3. Image – Opportunities for personalising housing gives a sense of ownership and care rather than impersonal high rise flats. If individuals have a say in the planning of future housing they are also more likely to take care of it.
  4. Milieu – Buildings set around large open spaces attract more crime like vandalism compared to smaller, semi-private spaces like courtyards.
 
Background: Zero Tolerance Policing
  • Police presence – increase this so people are aware that they will be watched.
  • Expect arrests – give police a quota of arrests to make each day
  • No crime is too small – any and all crime is stopped, so that the smaller crimes do not lead to the bigger crimes.
 
Background: Broken Windows Theory
  • Disorder leads to
  • Isolation, which leads to
  • Petty crime, which leads to
  • Serious Crime
 
Background: To prevent crime:
  • Make people feel safe
  • So they will go outside,
  • Which makes it difficult to commit crime, as you are being watched
  • So people will challenge criminal behaviour
Picture
Wilson and Kelling (1982) Broken Windows
Background
  • A variety of crime prevention strategies exist
  • 1970s – 28 US cities, police officers were taken from ‘patrol cars’ to ‘walking beats’
  • Foot patrol presence have no significant impact on crime rates. However, it helps ‘order maintenance’ and made communities feel safer.
 
Broken Windows theory
  • To focus on serious crime as a method of crime prevention is misleading
  • Serious crime is seen as a long-term consequence of disorder in communities
  • Neighbourhoods with disorder/unrest/vandalism/rowdy children/abandoned properties can lead to fear in communities. This then leads to withdrawal from the community which can lead to further unrest and no maintenance of order
  • Disorder when left unchallenged can lead to crime.
 
Implications of Broken Windows theory
  • Assigning officers to foot patrol in neighbourhoods with high crime rates is not always beneficial as these are not always the most vulnerable to criminal invasion
  • Officers should be assigned to communities where they can make the most difference
  • Maintenance of order is the most important role of the police in crime prevention
  • Zero tolerance.
Picture
Clarke’s social crime prevention strategies:
  • Target hardening - Making criminal targets more difficult such as putting locks on bikes or immobilisers on cars.
    • WHY – makes it less easy to receive positive reinforcement for the crime (operant conditioning)
  • Access control - Making it difficult for criminals to get into places such as having phone entry systems in blocks of flats.
    • WHY – limits availability and desirability.
  • Stimulating conscience – Appealing to criminals’ consciences, e.g. copyright stealing of messages on videos.
    • WHY – appeals to higher authority which requires obedience (Milgram)
  • Denying benefits – Make crime less worth it, e.g. attaching ink-filled security tabs to items of clothing.
    • WHY –makes it less easy to receive positive reinforcement for the crime (operant conditioning)
  • Facilitating compliance – To encourage people not to commit crimes by making it easier to do the right thing, e.g. having litter bins regularly available so littering is reduced.
    • WHY –makes it easy to do the right thing - positive reinforcement (operant conditioning)
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  • Psychology A Level
    • Independent Learning
    • Further and Wider than the A Level
    • Transition >
      • Psych at Uni >
        • Criminology at Uni
        • After Year 13 Pre-Uni Psych Resources
    • OCR Psych A Level >
      • Independent Learning
      • OCR Psych Revision
      • Exams >
        • Past papers >
          • Respect
        • OCR Psych Mock Exams
      • Paper 1: Research Methods >
        • Paper 1: What the paper is like
        • Research Methodology of the Core Studies
        • The 4 main research methods
        • Populations and Samples
        • Ethical Considerations
        • Self-reports
        • Observations
        • Correlations
        • Experiments
        • Reliability and Validity
        • Descriptive Statistics >
          • Distribution Curves
        • Inferential Statistics
        • Reporting, Referencing and Design your Own >
          • Sections of a Psychology Report
          • Harvard Referencing
          • Peer Review
      • Paper 2: Core Studies >
        • Paper 2: What the paper is like
        • Areas and Perspectives >
          • Social Area >
            • Milgram
            • Bocchiaro
            • Piliavin
            • Levine
          • Cognitive Area >
            • Loftus
            • Grant
            • Moray
            • Simons & Chabris
          • Developmental Area >
            • Bandura
            • Chaney
            • Kohlberg
            • Lee
          • Biological Area >
            • Sperry
            • Casey
            • Blakemore and Cooper
            • Maguire
          • Individual Differences Area >
            • Freud
            • Baron Cohen
            • Gould
            • Hancock
          • Behaviourist Perspective
          • Psychodynamic Perspective
        • Debates >
          • Nature v Nurture
          • Free Will v Determinism
          • Reductionism v Holism
          • Individual v Situational
          • Usefulness
          • Ethical Considerations
          • Socially Sensitive Research
          • Psych as a Science
          • Methodological Issues
          • Ethnocentrism
      • Paper 3: Applied Psychology >
        • Issues of Mental Health >
          • Historical Context of Mental Health
          • The Medical Model
          • Alternatives to the Medical Model
        • Paper 3: Options >
          • Child Psychology >
            • Intelligence
            • Pre-adult brain development
            • Perception
            • Cognitive Development
            • Attachment
            • Impact of Advertising
          • Criminal Psychology >
            • What makes a criminal?
            • Forensic Evidence
            • Collection of Evidence
            • Psychology & the Courtroom
            • Crime Prevention
            • Effect of Imprisonment
          • Environmental Psychology
          • Sport and Exercise Psychology
    • AQA Psych A level >
      • Paper 1 >
        • Social Influence
        • Memory
        • Attachment
        • Psychopathology
      • Paper 2 >
        • Approaches
        • Biopsychology
        • Research Methods >
          • Aims, Hypotheses and Variables
          • Populations and Samples
          • Experiments and Experimental Designs
          • Self-reports
          • Ethical Considerations
          • Reliability and Validity
          • Mathematical Skills >
            • Descriptive Statistics
      • Paper 3 >
        • Issues and Debates
        • Relationships / Gender / Cognition
        • Schizophrenia / Eating / Stress
        • Aggression / Forensics / Addiction
  • Sociology A Level
    • AQA Sociology A Level >
      • Education
      • Families and Households
      • Media
      • Crime and Deviance >
        • 8. Globalisation, Green and State Crimes
        • 9. Control, Punishment and Victims
  • For Teachers..