Stay at home if you can: COVID-19 stay-at-home guidelines and local crime

IF 1.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW
Carlos Díaz, Sebastian Fossati, Nicolás Trajtenberg
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Abstract

Government responses to the COVID-19 pandemic had an unprecedented impact on mobility patterns with implications for public safety and crime dynamics in countries across the planet. This paper explores the effect of stay-at-home guidelines on thefts and robberies at the neighborhood level in a Latin American city. We exploit neighborhood heterogeneity in the ability of working adults to comply with stay-at-home recommendations and use difference-in-differences and event-study designs to identify the causal effect of COVID-19 mobility restrictions on the monthly number of thefts and robberies reported to police across neighborhoods in Montevideo (Uruguay) in 2020. Our results show that neighborhoods with a higher share of residents with work-from-home jobs experienced a larger reduction in reported thefts in relation to neighborhoods with a lower share of residents with work-from-home jobs. In contrast, both groups of neighborhoods experienced a similar reduction in the number of reported robberies. These findings cast light on opportunity structures for crime but also on how crime during the pandemic has disproportionately affected more vulnerable areas and households.
尽可能呆在家里:COVID-19居家指南和当地犯罪
政府对COVID-19大流行的应对措施对流动模式产生了前所未有的影响,对全球各国的公共安全和犯罪动态产生了影响。本文探讨了在拉丁美洲一个城市的邻里层面上,居家指导方针对盗窃和抢劫的影响。我们利用社区在工作成年人遵守居家建议能力方面的异质性,并采用差异中差异和事件研究设计来确定2019冠状病毒病流动性限制对2020年乌拉圭蒙得维的亚各社区每月向警方报告的盗窃和抢劫数量的因果影响。我们的研究结果表明,与在家工作的居民比例较低的社区相比,在家工作的居民比例较高的社区报告的盗窃案减少幅度更大。相比之下,两组社区在报告的抢劫案数量上都有类似的减少。这些调查结果不仅揭示了犯罪的机会结构,而且还揭示了大流行期间的犯罪如何不成比例地影响到更脆弱的地区和家庭。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
11.80%
发文量
34
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