Abstract:
This interdisciplinary project explores “predictive policing”, a blanket term given to a
number of crime prediction algorithms and tools used by police departments across the
globe in an effort to predict and pre-empt crime occurrence. This project attempts to cut
through the profound amount of both positive and negative rhetoric surrounding predictive
policing software to understand what theory they are based on, how they are actually
implemented in software, and how they interface with police officers working on-the-beat.
Through a literature review of empirical environmental criminology research, a theory of
how crime self-concentrates in space and time is discussed, as well as the potential
explanations for this behaviour. Using this literature, two predictive models of criminal
behaviour are introduced, explained, tested, and analysed, to understand how empirical
crime observations can be translated into software. Using numerical results obtained from
these models in conjunction with existing meta-critiques of predictive policing tools, the
argument is made that while current predictive policing tools may hold theoretical value in
the field of crime prediction, they have enough significant drawbacks as to cast doubt on
their use to predict real world crime.
Description:
1 online resource (viii, 121 pages) : colour illustrations, charts (some colour), graphs (some colour)
Includes abstract and appendices.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 101-104).