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Situational Crime Prevention Analysis×Routine Activity Theory×
CampoCriminologyCriminology
FamigliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Anno di origine19971979
IdeatoreRonald V. ClarkeLawrence E. Cohen & Marcus Felson
TipoOpportunity-reduction framework for crime preventionTheoretical framework for explaining the occurrence of predatory crime
Fonte seminaleClarke, R. V. (Ed.). (1997). Situational Crime Prevention: Successful Case Studies (2nd ed.). Harrow and Heston. ISBN: 9780911577389Cohen, L. E., & Felson, M. (1979). Social change and crime rate trends: A routine activity approach. American Sociological Review, 44(4), 588–608. DOI ↗
AliasSCP, Situational Prevention, Opportunity-Reduction Framework, Twenty-Five Techniques of Situational Crime PreventionRAT, Routine Activities Approach, Crime Triangle Framework, Cohen-Felson Theory
Correlati44
SintesiSituational crime prevention (SCP) is a framework, developed by Ronald Clarke, for reducing crime by changing the immediate situations in which it occurs rather than the dispositions of offenders. It diagnoses the specific opportunities that make a crime easy, rewarding, or low-risk and then applies twenty-five practical techniques organized under five mechanisms: increase effort, increase risk, reduce rewards, reduce provocations, and remove excuses.Routine activity theory explains predatory crime not by the supply of motivated offenders but by the everyday structure of legal activities that brings offenders, targets, and the absence of guardians together in space and time. Proposed by Lawrence Cohen and Marcus Felson in 1979, it argues that crime rates can rise even when offender motivation is constant, because changes in how people work, shop, and spend leisure time alter the opportunities for crime.
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