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Spatio-temporal variations in the urban rhythm: the travelling waves of crime

[journal article]

Oliveira, Marcos
Ribeiro, Eraldo
Bastos-Filho, Carmelo
Menezes, Ronaldo

Abstract

In the last decades, the notion that cities are in a state of equilibrium with a centralised organisation has given place to the viewpoint of cities in disequilibrium and organised from bottom to up. In this perspective, cities are evolving systems that exhibit emergent phenomena built from local de... view more

In the last decades, the notion that cities are in a state of equilibrium with a centralised organisation has given place to the viewpoint of cities in disequilibrium and organised from bottom to up. In this perspective, cities are evolving systems that exhibit emergent phenomena built from local decisions. While urban evolution promotes the emergence of positive social phenomena such as the formation of innovation hubs and the increase in cultural diversity, it also yields negative phenomena such as increases in criminal activity. Yet, we are still far from understanding the driving mechanisms of these phenomena. In particular, approaches to analyse urban phenomena are limited in scope by neglecting both temporal non-stationarity and spatial heterogeneity. In the case of criminal activity, we know for more than one century that crime peaks during specific times of the year, but the literature still fails to characterise the mobility of crime. Here we develop an approach to describe the spatial, temporal, and periodic variations in urban quantities. With crime data from 12 cities, we characterise how the periodicity of crime varies spatially across the city over time. We confirm one-year criminal cycles and show that this periodicity occurs unevenly across the city. These 'waves of crime' keep travelling across the city: while cities have a stable number of regions with a circannual period, the regions exhibit non-stationary series. Our findings support the concept of cities in a constant change, influencing urban phenomena - in agreement with the notion of cities not in equilibrium.... view less

Keywords
town; criminality; regional comparison; United States of America

Classification
Criminal Sociology, Sociology of Law

Free Keywords
city science; complex systems; crime science; urban activity

Document language
English

Publication Year
2018

Page/Pages
p. 1-13

Journal
EPJ Data Science, 7 (2018)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1140/epjds/s13688-018-0158-4

ISSN
2193-1127

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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© 2007 - 2025 Social Science Open Access Repository (SSOAR).
Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.