热点巡逻的频率与时间:一项随机对照试验

Simon Williams, T. Coupe
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The dependent variable was total reports of crime and anti-social behaviour (ASB) identified within the hot spot boundaries each day of the experiment.MethodAll seven hot spots of crime and ASB were randomly allocated each day to one of two patrol duration conditions for a period of 100 days (43 “short” visit days and 57 “long” visit days) between June and November 2015, with patrol time measures reported back to officers on the number and length of patrols conducted daily. The long visit model required three visits daily of 15 min duration each; the short visit model required nine visits daily of 5 min each. On all days, a target of 45 min of total patrol time was required.ResultsActual patrol delivery measured by GPS and activity reports produced a mean of just over 24 patrol-minutes (of one or more officers present) on “long” days and just under 26 min on “short” days, so that dosage was approximately held constant to test the independent effect of more or fewer visits. The treatment as delivered on “long” days was a mean of 2.5 visits averaging 9.6 min each; on “short” days, the same officers delivered a mean of 5 visits averaging 5.2 min each. The less-frequent long visit model was more effective than the more-frequent short visit model, with mean counts of crime and ASB incidents 19.51% lower on long visit days =0.697 incidents per day compared to 0.561 incidents per day on short visit days (d = −0.175; p = 0.018).ConclusionControlling for the total patrol time spent at a hot spot each day, the difference between 2.5 longer visits and 5 shorter visits causes about 20% less crime when longer visits are delivered. These findings of the deterrent effect of increasing patrol visit length by 85% are consistent with Koper’s (1995) correlational observation that longer units of 10–15 min duration appeared optimal in creating a residual deterrent effect at a hot spot immediately after police leave the vicinity. 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引用次数: 31

摘要

研究问题:如果警察每天出现的总时间大致保持不变,对同一个犯罪热点进行较短但较频繁的巡逻是否比较少但较长时间的巡逻更有效地减少了每日犯罪和反社会行为(ASB)总数?DataGPS通过巡警随身携带的无线电跟踪了每名巡警在7个150 × 150米的地理围栏犯罪“热点”内停留的时间,将每个热点每天的单个巡警分钟数和巡逻分钟数(同时有一名或多名巡警在场),以及每次巡警的次数和分钟数加起来。活动报告用于检测同时有一名以上警官在场的情况,从而得出一名或多名警官在场的巡逻次数和巡逻时间等关键独立变量。因变量是每天在实验热点范围内确定的犯罪和反社会行为(ASB)的总报告。方法在2015年6月至11月期间,将所有7个犯罪热点和ASB热点每天随机分配到两种巡逻时间条件中的一种,为期100天(43个“短”巡逻日和57个“长”巡逻日),并将巡逻时间测量结果反馈给警员,包括每天巡逻的次数和时长。长时间访问模型需要每天访问三次,每次访问时间为15分钟;短期访问模型需要每天访问9次,每次5分钟。在所有的日子里,总巡逻时间的目标是45分钟。结果:通过GPS和活动报告测量的实际巡逻交付在“长”日产生的平均巡逻时间刚刚超过24分钟(一名或多名警官在场),在“短”日产生的平均巡逻时间不到26分钟,因此剂量大致保持不变,以测试访问次数多或少的独立影响。在“长”日提供的治疗平均为2.5次就诊,平均每次9.6分钟;在“短”日,这些人员平均进行5次探访,每次平均5.2分钟。较不频繁的长访模式比较频繁的短访模式更有效,长访日的平均犯罪计数和ASB事件数(0.697例/天)比短访日的0.561例/天低19.51% (d = - 0.175;p = 0.018)。结论控制每天在热点地区巡逻的总时间,当巡逻时间较长时,2.5次较长巡逻时间和5次较短巡逻时间的差异导致犯罪率减少约20%。这些关于增加巡逻时间85%的威慑效果的发现与Koper(1995)的相关观察一致,即在警察离开附近后,在热点立即产生剩余威慑效果,10-15分钟的较长单位是最佳的。虽然这项研究不能区分在警察离开现场后立即减少犯罪和在警察离开现场后很长一段时间减少犯罪,但这是第一个随机分配每天到热点地区访问次数的实质性差异(两倍)的实验,每次访问的时间几乎是每次访问次数的两倍。随机分配两种不同的巡逻模式,在相同的7个地理单位中使用相同的总时间,这使我们非常有信心,在较长时间内使用较少的巡逻时间比在较短时间内使用较多的巡逻时间导致的犯罪和反社会行为更少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Frequency Vs. Length of Hot Spots Patrols: a Randomised Controlled Trial
Research QuestionDo shorter but more frequent patrol visits to the same crime hot spots reduce daily crime and anti-social behaviour (ASB) totals more effectively than less frequent but longer patrols, if the total time that police are present each day is held roughly constant?DataGPS measures from patrol officer body-worn radios tracked the time each officer spent within seven geo-fenced crime “hot spots” of 150 × 150 m, summing the number of both individual officer-minutes and patrol-minutes (with one or more officers present simultaneously) per day per hot spot, as well as number of visits and minutes per visit. Activity reports were used to detect the simultaneous presence of more than one officer, yielding the key independent variables of number and length of patrol visits in which one or more police officers were present. The dependent variable was total reports of crime and anti-social behaviour (ASB) identified within the hot spot boundaries each day of the experiment.MethodAll seven hot spots of crime and ASB were randomly allocated each day to one of two patrol duration conditions for a period of 100 days (43 “short” visit days and 57 “long” visit days) between June and November 2015, with patrol time measures reported back to officers on the number and length of patrols conducted daily. The long visit model required three visits daily of 15 min duration each; the short visit model required nine visits daily of 5 min each. On all days, a target of 45 min of total patrol time was required.ResultsActual patrol delivery measured by GPS and activity reports produced a mean of just over 24 patrol-minutes (of one or more officers present) on “long” days and just under 26 min on “short” days, so that dosage was approximately held constant to test the independent effect of more or fewer visits. The treatment as delivered on “long” days was a mean of 2.5 visits averaging 9.6 min each; on “short” days, the same officers delivered a mean of 5 visits averaging 5.2 min each. The less-frequent long visit model was more effective than the more-frequent short visit model, with mean counts of crime and ASB incidents 19.51% lower on long visit days =0.697 incidents per day compared to 0.561 incidents per day on short visit days (d = −0.175; p = 0.018).ConclusionControlling for the total patrol time spent at a hot spot each day, the difference between 2.5 longer visits and 5 shorter visits causes about 20% less crime when longer visits are delivered. These findings of the deterrent effect of increasing patrol visit length by 85% are consistent with Koper’s (1995) correlational observation that longer units of 10–15 min duration appeared optimal in creating a residual deterrent effect at a hot spot immediately after police leave the vicinity. Although this study cannot distinguish between crime reductions immediately after vs. long after police have left the scene, this is the first experiment to randomly assign a substantial difference (twice as many) in the number of visits daily to a hot spot, with almost twice as much time per visit when fewer visits are made. The use of random assignment of two different patrol models with the same total time in the same seven geographic units gives great confidence that using that time in fewer visits of longer duration causes less crime and anti-social behaviour than more visits of shorter duration.
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