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40 Aust. & N.Z. J. Criminology 1 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/anzjc40 and id is 1 raw text is: 





When Does Repeat Burglary

Victimisation Occur?

Alex Sagovsky and Shane  D.Johnson
UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science, United Kingdom





       R   esearch consistently demonstrates that past victimisation is among the
          best predictors of future risk. Using recorded domestic burglary crime
       data from Victoria,Australia, analyses were conducted to examine temporal
       patterns of repeat burglary victimisation. The analyses focus on both time
       elapsed between incidents at the same location and the time of day that
       events occur, the latter previously unexamined in the literature. The time-
       course of revictimisation is as found hitherto: revictimisation occurs swiftly
       and the risk of repetition decays over time. Considering the time of day, in
       line with routine activities theory, the majority of incidents (first or follow-
       up events) occurred during the day. More interestingly, the results suggest
       that, relative to repeat burglaries that occur months after the first offence,
       those that occur within 7 days are more likely to occur at the same time of
       the day as the antecedent event. Moreover, the time course of revictimisa-
       tion appears to vary for burglaries that occur at different times of the day.
       The results are discussed in relation to routine activities theory and with
       respect to their implications for crime reduction.

That crime  is concentrated on the same people and places and that this has poten-
tial for crime control has been described as the most  important  criminological
insight of the decade (Skogan, 1996  as cited in Brady, 1996, p. 3). Bowers et al.
(2004) point out that 'it is almost a truism to note that while the information we
have is about the past, it is the future we need to know about' (p. 1). Yet it is in this
truism that the importance of repeat victimisation as a tool for tackling crime can
be found; the power of previous victimisation as a predictor for future victimisation
is unsurpassed by any other variable (Budd, 1999; Pease, 1998). Polvi et al. (1991)
urge that we  think 'in terms of a continuum  of crime predictability. The more
exactly a crime location can be specified in advance, the greater the opportunity for
prevention or detection' (Polvi et al., 1991, p. 411). Predicting the timing of repeat
victimisations will be the main focus of this article.
   Targeting repeat victimisation has a host of benefits. First and foremost, police
services and crime prevention  initiatives that focus on the prevention of repeat
victimisation will be directed towards the people who  are most  vulnerable. For
instance, in the 1992 British Crime Survey it was found that 4% of people suffered



Address for correspondence: Shane D. Johnson, UCL Jill Dando Institute of Crime Science,
University College London, Second Floor, Brook House, 2-16 Torrington Place, London,
WC1E   7HN, United Kingdom. E-mail: shane.johnson@ucl.ac.uk


THE AUSTRALIAN AND  NEW  ZEALAND  JOURNAL OF CRIMINOLOGY
VOLUME 40 NUMBER I 2007 PP 1-26

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