Results 221 to 230 of about 44,461 (259)

Forecasting Future Crime Rates

Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, 2023
Despite its importance for testing criminological theories and informing crime control policy, forecasting crime rates has all but disappeared from criminology. We argue for a resurgence of crime forecasting in the study of crime trends. As an example of the value, as well as the challenges, of forecasting, we engage in a forecasting exercise based on
Richard Rosenfeld, Mark Berg
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Introduction to crime forecasting

International Journal of Forecasting, 2003
Abstract This short paper introduces the six papers comprising the Special Section on Crime Forecasting. A longer title for the section could have been “Forecasting crime for policy and planning decisions and in support of tactical deployment of police resources.” Crime forecasting for police is relatively new.
Wilpen Gorr, Richard Harries
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Forecasting Crime

1999
Organizations in the private sector must do strategic planning over long-term horizons to locate new facilities, plan new products, develop competitive advantages, and so forth. Consequently, long-term forecasts of demand, costs of raw materials, etc. are important in the private sector.
Wilpen Gorr   +3 more
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Forecasting Crime Occurrence

2021
This chapter suggests that the theory of convenience can be applied in forecasting white-collar crime probability in organizations. Three discrete levels represent the probability for white-collar crime occurrence in the organization. Level one has the green color with zero to one-third likelihood of crime (probability of 0%–33%).
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Crime forecasters

Science, 2016
Police are turning to big data to stop crime before it happens. But is predictive policing biased—and does it even work?
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Forecasting Crimes Using Autoregressive Models

2016 IEEE 14th Intl Conf on Dependable, Autonomic and Secure Computing, 14th Intl Conf on Pervasive Intelligence and Computing, 2nd Intl Conf on Big Data Intelligence and Computing and Cyber Science and Technology Congress(DASC/PiCom/DataCom/CyberSciTech), 2016
As a result of steadily increasing urbanization, by 2030 more than sixty percent of the global population will live in cities. This phenomenon is stimulating significant economic and social transformations, both positive (such as, increased opportunities offered in urban areas) and negative (such as, increased crime and pressures on city budgets ...
Cesario E., Catlett C., Talia D.
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