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Article
Why Your Bar Has Crime but Not Mine: Resolving the Land Use and Crime – Risky Facility Conflict
Justice Quarterly
  • YongJei Lee, University of Colorado
  • SooHyun O, Tarleton State University
  • John E. Eck, University of Cincinnati
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2022
Keywords
  • Crime places,
  • fixed effects,
  • land use,
  • place management,
  • risky facilities
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)
https://doi.org/10.1080/07418825.2021.1903068
Abstract

Interpretations of two bodies of crime-place research conflict. Land use and crime studies claim particular facilities increase crime. Risky facilities studies show most places of a single type have little or no crime, but a few of that type have a great deal of crime. How can a facility be generally criminogenic and mostly safe? To resolve this conflict, we make use of the fact that a single owner can own multiple facilities and each owner may have consistent management practices in their facilities. We first replicate findings of earlier land use studies with crime and land parcel data from Cincinnati. Second, we cluster land parcels by property owners and re-estimate the land use and crime relationship. The links between land use and crime in the replication decline or disappear after clustering. Findings suggest owners’ place management influences crime at their places, thus resolving the conflict between the two bodies of research.

Citation / Publisher Attribution

Justice Quarterly, v. 39, issue 5, p. 1009-1035

Citation Information
YongJei Lee, SooHyun O and John E. Eck. "Why Your Bar Has Crime but Not Mine: Resolving the Land Use and Crime – Risky Facility Conflict" Justice Quarterly Vol. 39 Iss. 5 (2022) p. 1009 - 1035
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/yongjei-lee/16/