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Analyse de recoupement d'affaires criminelles×Analyse de réseaux de jurisprudence×
DomaineCriminalistiqueCriminalistique
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine20022011
Auteur d'origineCraig BennellJames Fowler
TypeCrime science and offender profiling methodNetwork science and legal informatics method
Source fondatriceBennell, C., Canter, D. V., & Alison, L. J. (2002). Linking commercial burglaries by modus operandi: Tests using regression and ROC analysis. Science and Justice, 42(3), 153-164. DOI ↗Lupo, G., & Bailey, J. (2014). Artificial intelligence and legal practice. Academic Press. link ↗
Aliascase linkage, offender linking, serial crime attributioncitation network analysis, legal precedent mapping, case law graph analysis
Apparentées33
RésuméCrime linkage analysis is a forensic method that determines whether a series of crimes were committed by the same offender based on behavioral and modus operandi (MO) similarities. Developed systematically by Craig Bennell and colleagues in the early 2000s, crime linkage applies statistical and similarity-matching techniques to establish offender attribution. The method is essential in serial crime investigation, where establishing linkage enables consolidation of investigation resources, geographic profiling, and offender-focused surveillance.Network analysis of case law applies graph-theoretic and network science methods to study the structure and dynamics of legal precedent systems. Developed systematically by James Fowler and colleagues in 2011, this method treats legal citations as directed edges in a network where nodes represent court decisions and edges represent precedent relationships. By analyzing the topology of these networks, researchers uncover patterns in how law evolves, which precedents are most influential, and how legal doctrine spreads across jurisdictions.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Crime Linkage Analysis · Network Analysis of Case Law. Consulté le 2026-06-20 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare