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Conjunctive Analysis of Case Configurations×Crime Script Analysis×
FieldCriminologyCriminology
FamilyProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Year of origin20081994
OriginatorTerance Miethe, Timothy Hart & Wendy RegoecziDerek B. Cornish
TypeExploratory case-based multivariate analysis of categorical crime dataQualitative procedural decomposition of crime commission
Seminal sourceMiethe, T. D., Hart, T. C., & Regoeczi, W. C. (2008). The conjunctive analysis of case configurations: An exploratory method for discrete multivariate analyses of crime data. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 24(2), 227–241. DOI ↗Cornish, D. B. (1994). The procedural analysis of offending and its relevance for situational prevention. Crime Prevention Studies, 3, 151–196. link ↗
AliasesCACC, Conjunctive Analysis, Case Configuration AnalysisCrime Scripting, Script Analysis, Procedural Analysis of Offending, Offense Script Analysis
Related44
SummaryConjunctive analysis of case configurations (CACC) is an exploratory, case-based method for analyzing categorical crime data. Introduced by Miethe, Hart, and Regoeczi in 2008, it builds a matrix of all observed combinations of categorical attributes — the distinct case 'profiles' — and tabulates how often each occurs and what its outcome rate is, revealing how attributes act in combination rather than as isolated net effects.Crime script analysis adapts the cognitive concept of a 'script' — the ordered sequence of actions for a routine activity, like dining at a restaurant — to crime. Introduced by Derek Cornish in 1994, it decomposes a complete offense into its successive scenes and actions, from preparation through entry, the act itself, and exit, exposing the requirements at each stage and the points where intervention can break the sequence.
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