Environment and Crime in the Inner City
- 1 May 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Environment and Behavior
- Vol. 33 (3), 343-367
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0013916501333002
Abstract
Although vegetation has been positively linked to fear of crime and crime in a number of settings, recent findings in urban residential areas have hinted at a possible negative relationship: Residents living in “greener” surroundings report lower levels of fear, fewer incivilities, and less aggressive and violent behavior. This study used police crime reports to examine the relationship between vegetation and crime in an inner-city neighborhood. Crime rates for 98 apartment buildings with varying levels of nearby vegetation were compared. Results indicate that although residents were randomly assigned to different levels of nearby vegetation, the greener a building’s surroundings were, the fewer crimes reported. Furthermore, this pattern held for both property crimes and violent crimes. The relationship of vegetation to crime held after the number of apartments per building, building height, vacancy rate, and number of occupied units per building were accounted for.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Relationship Between Substance Use Disorders, Impulse Control Disorders, and Pathological AggressionThe American Journal on Addictions, 1998
- Irritability and impulsiveness: relationship to self-reported impulsive aggressionPersonality and Individual Differences, 1995
- Fear of Crime in Relation to Three Exterior Site FeaturesEnvironment and Behavior, 1992
- Estimating the Reliability of Aggregate-Level Variables Based on Individual-Level CharacteristicsSociological Methods & Research, 1990
- Territorial cues and defensible space theory: The burglar's point of viewJournal of Environmental Psychology, 1989
- Perceptions of the security and attractiveness of urban parking lotsJournal of Environmental Psychology, 1985
- Aggressive conduct disorder: A brief reviewAggressive Behavior, 1985
- Territoriality, defensible space and residential burglary: An environmental analysisJournal of Environmental Psychology, 1983
- Residents' Perceptions of Territorial Features and Perceived Local ThreatEnvironment and Behavior, 1983
- The Crime Displacement Hypothesis: an Empirical ExaminationCrime & Delinquency, 1981