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Journal ArticleDOI

The philadelphia foot patrol experiment: a randomized controlled trial of police patrol effectiveness in violent crime hotspots*

TLDR
In this article, the authors report on the efforts of more than 200 foot patrol officers during the summer of 2009 in Philadelphia and suggest that intensive foot patrol efforts in violent hotspots may achieve deterrence at a microspatial level, primarily by increasing the certainty of disruption, apprehension and arrest.
Abstract
Originating with the Newark, NJ, foot patrol experiment, research has found police foot patrols improve community perception of the police and reduce fear of crime, but they are generally unable to reduce the incidence of crime. Previous tests of foot patrol have, however, suffered from statistical and measurement issues and have not fully explored the potential dynamics of deterrence within microspatial settings. In this article, we report on the efforts of more than 200 foot patrol officers during the summer of 2009 in Philadelphia. Geographic information systems (GIS) analysis was the basis for a randomized controlled trial of police effectiveness across 60 violent crime hotspots. The results identified a significant reduction in the level of treatment area violent crime after 12 weeks. A linear regression model with separate slopes fitted for treatment and control groups clarified the relationship even more. Even after accounting for natural regression to the mean, target areas in the top 40 percent on pretreatment violent crime counts had significantly less violent crime during the operational period. Target areas outperformed the control sites by 23 percent, resulting in a total net effect (once displacement was considered) of 53 violent crimes prevented. The results suggest that targeted foot patrols in violent crime hotspots can significantly reduce violent crime levels as long as a threshold level of violence exists initially. The findings contribute to a growing body of evidence on the contribution of hotspots and place-based policing to the reduction of crime, and especially violent crime, which is a significant public health threat in the United States. We suggest that intensive foot patrol efforts in violent hotspots may achieve deterrence at a microspatial level, primarily by increasing the certainty of disruption, apprehension, and arrest. The theoretical and practical implications for violence reduction are discussed.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Effects of Hot Spots Policing on Crime: An Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of hot spots policing and crime were investigated and Meta-analyses were used to determine the size, direction, and statistical significance of the overall impact of hot-spaces policing strategies on crime.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Rise of Evidence-Based Policing: Targeting, Testing, and Tracking

TL;DR: In contrast to basing decisions on theory, assumptions, tradition, or convention, an evidence-based approach continuously tests hypotheses with empirical research findings as discussed by the authors, which helps assure that police neither increase crime nor waste money.
Journal ArticleDOI

Randomized Controlled Field Trials of Predictive Policing

TL;DR: In this article, the authors report results of two randomized controlled trials of near real-time epidemic-type aftershock sequence (ETAS) crime forecasting, one trial within three divisions of the Los Angeles Police Department and the other trial within two divisions of Kent Police Department (United Kingdom).
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Greening Vacant Land on Mental Health of Community-Dwelling Adults: A Cluster Randomized Trial

TL;DR: The remediation of vacant and dilapidated physical environments, particularly in resource-limited urban settings, can be an important tool for communities to address mental health problems, alongside other patient-level treatments.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting Spillover Effects: Design and Analysis of Multilevel Experiments

TL;DR: In this article, a multilevel experimental design was proposed to evaluate the influence of interpersonal communication in a large-scale voter-mobilization experiment conducted in Chicago during a special election in 2009.
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How effectiveness is police visibility in terms of foot info dissemination?

Targeted foot patrols in violent crime hotspots significantly reduce violent crime levels, primarily through deterrence by increasing the certainty of disruption, apprehension, and arrest.