Abstract:
Crime has four aspects: an offender, a victim, a law that is broken, and a place where the crime occurs (Brantingham & Brantingham, 1991). This research will look at this fourth aspect to determine what environmental features, if any, affect residential burglaries. It's not about why people commit burglaries, but why offenders choose the targets they do. Rather than focusing on the biological or social reasoning behind an individual's criminal behavior, environmental criminology instead focuses on the locations in which crime occurs. The goal is to find significant patterns in crime locations and look for environmental features that may help explain the increased criminogenic activity. In this particular research, which utilizes a process called Risk Terrain Modeling to assess burglaries in Valdosta, Georgia, these identified environmental risk features are weighted and a map of places at risk for burglary is created that can then aid police officers and city planners in allocating resources in a cost-efficient manner and possibly developing preventative measures.