Crime Analysis and Crime Mapping

Front Cover
SAGE, Jul 8, 2005 - Computers - 301 pages
Crime Analysis and Crime Mapping, one of the first texts to introduce crime analysis and crime mapping to an undergraduate audience, is enriched by author Rachel Boba's unique perspective as a current professor and former crime analyst. The book offers a thorough introduction to the field as well as guidelines for its practice, making it a useful asset for current and future crime analysts and police practitioners as well as for students.
 

Contents

The Crime Analysis Profession
19
Introduction to Crime Mapping
37
Theory and Crime Analysis
59
Crime Analysis Data
75
Tactical Crime Analysis
111
Describing Analyzing and Disseminating Known Patterns
141
Strategic Crime Analysis
165
75
174
83
200
Spatial Analysis
207
Strategic Crime Analysis Products
231
Administrative Crime Analysis
243
Sample Problem Analysis Project
261
86
264
Glossary
275
Index
289

76
180
Temporal Analysis
189
80
193

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2005)

Rachel Boba Santos is a professor at Radford University in the Department of Criminal Justice. She works with police departments and crime analysts. She conducts experimental and applied research on place-based and offender-based police crime reduction strategies, stratified policing, crime analysis, community engagement, and police use of force. Rachel Boba Santos is a professor at Radford University in the Department of Criminal Justice. She works with police departments and crime analysts. She conducts experimental and applied research on place-based and offender-based police crime reduction strategies, stratified policing, crime analysis, community engagement, and police use of force. Dr. Santos′ interests include conducting practice-based research which is implementing and evaluating evidence-based practices in the "real world" of criminal justice. In particular, she seeks to improve crime prevention and crime reduction efforts by police in areas such as crime analysis, problem solving, accountability, as well as leadership and organizational change. She and Dr. Roberto Santos co-created Stratified Policing which is an organizational model for systemizing proactive crime reduction strategies in police departments. Other areas of research include police/researcher partnerships, police/community collaboration, hot spot and problem-oriented policing, predictive policing, environmental criminology, crime and place, police/crime data and technology, experimental research methodology, and program evaluation.