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Reframing the properties, places and crime paradigm: exploring spatiotemporal regime shifts

James R. DeLisle (Academic Real Estate Programs, Department of Global Entrepreneurship and Innovation, University of Missouri Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, USA)
Terry V. Grissom (Department of Economics and Econometrics, Ely Research Institute, Red Lodge, Montana, USA)
Brent Never (Department of Public Affairs, University of Missouri Kansas City, Kansas City, Missouri, USA)

Journal of European Real Estate Research

ISSN: 1753-9269

Article publication date: 23 July 2020

Issue publication date: 5 April 2022

156

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this study is to explore spatiotemporal factors that affect the empirical analysis of whether crime rates in buffer areas surrounding abandoned properties transferred to a Land Bank that differed among three regimes: before transfer, during Land Bank stewardship and after disposition and whether those differences were associated with differences in relative crime activity in the neighborhoods in which they were located.

Design/methodology/approach

This study analyzed crime incidents occurring between 2010 and 2018 in 0.1-mile buffer areas surrounding 31 abandoned properties sold by the Land Bank and their neighborhoods in which those properties were located. Using Copulas, researchers compared concordance/discordance in the buffer areas across the three regime states for each property and approximately matched time periods for associated neighborhoods.

Findings

In a substantial number of cases, the relative crime activity levels for buffer areas surrounding individual sold properties as measured by the Copulas shifted from concordant to discordant states and vice versa. Similarly, relative crime activity levels for neighborhoods shifted from concordant to discordant states across three matched regimes. In some cases, the property and neighborhood states matched, while in other cases they diverged. These cross-level interactions indicate that criminal behavioral patterns and target selection change over time and relative criminal activity. The introduction of Copulas can improve the reliability of such models over time and when and where they should be customized to add more granular insights needed by law enforcement agencies.

Research limitations/implications

The introduction of Copulas can improve the spatiotemporal reliability of the analysis of criminal activity over space and time.

Practical implications

Spatiotemporal considerations should be incorporated in setting interventions to manage criminal activity.

Social implications

This study provides support for policies supporting renovation of abandoned properties.

Originality/value

To the best of authors’ knowledge, this research is the first application of Copulas to crime impact studies. As noted, Copulas can help reduce the risk of applying intervention or enforcement programs that are no longer reliable or lack the precision provided by insights into convergent/divergent patterns of criminal activity.

Keywords

Citation

DeLisle, J.R., Grissom, T.V. and Never, B. (2022), "Reframing the properties, places and crime paradigm: exploring spatiotemporal regime shifts", Journal of European Real Estate Research, Vol. 15 No. 1, pp. 3-38. https://doi.org/10.1108/JERER-12-2019-0059

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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