娱乐区及其周围的暴力:深夜关闭立法影响的纵向分析

Lorraine Mazerolle, Gentry White, Janet Ransley, Patricia L. Ferguson
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引用次数: 30

摘要

娱乐区的暴力是世界各地城市景观的一个主要问题。研究表明,有执照的场所是凶杀和严重袭击的第三大常见地点,占致命和非致命袭击的十分之一。一类旨在减少娱乐区暴力的干预措施涉及使用民事补救措施:一组使用民事或监管措施作为法律“杠杆”来减少问题行为的策略。用于减少娱乐区问题行为的一种具体民事补救措施涉及操纵持牌场所的营业时间。本文采用广义线性模型分析了澳大利亚昆士兰州两个娱乐区的锁门立法对记录的暴力犯罪的影响。我们的研究表明,凌晨3点的关门立法直接显著减少了在有执照的场所内发生的暴力事件的数量。事实上,禁酒令使有执照的场所内的暴力犯罪率下降了一半。尽管在控制持牌场所内的暴力行为方面取得了这些令人印象深刻的成果,但我们发现没有证据表明,封锁对持牌场所外的街道和人行道上的暴力行为有任何影响,而这些地方是娱乐区80%以上暴力事件的发生地。然而,总的来说,我们的分析表明,禁酒是一种重要的机制,有助于控制有执照的场所内的暴力程度,但对酒精相关问题需要细致入微的情境反应,而不是一刀切的解决方案。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Violence in and Around Entertainment Districts: A Longitudinal Analysis of the Impact of Late‐Night Lockout Legislation
Violence in entertainment districts is a major problem across urban landscapes throughout the world. Research shows that licensed premises are the third most common location for homicides and serious assaults, accounting for one in ten fatal and nonfatal assaults. One class of interventions that aims to reduce violence in entertainment districts involves the use of civil remedies: a group of strategies that use civil or regulatory measures as legal “levers” to reduce problem behavior. One specific civil remedy used to reduce problematic behavior in entertainment districts involves manipulation of licensed premise trading hours. This article uses generalized linear models to analyze the impact of lockout legislation on recorded violent offences in two entertainment districts in the Australian state of Queensland. Our research shows that 3 a.m. lockout legislation led to a direct and significant reduction in the number of violent incidents inside licensed premises. Indeed, the lockouts cut the level of violent crime inside licensed premises by half. Despite these impressive results for the control of violence inside licensed premises, we found no evidence that the lockout had any impact on violence on streets and footpaths outside licensed premises that were the site for more than 80 percent of entertainment district violence. Overall, however, our analysis suggests that lockouts are an important mechanism that helps to control the level of violence inside licensed premises but that finely grained contextual responses to alcohol-related problems are needed rather than one-size-fits-all solutions.
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