The Burglary Boost: A Note on Detecting Contagion Using the Knox Test
Authored by Ross A Hammond, Joseph T Ornstein
Date Published: 2017
DOI: 10.1007/s10940-016-9281-1
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
A large body of literature in quantitative criminology finds that the
spatio-temporal clustering of burglary is greater than one would expect
from chance alone. This suggests that such crimes may exhibit a
``boost{''} effect, wherein each burglary increases the risk to nearby
locations for a short period. In this study, we demonstrate that
standard tests for spatio-temporal dependence have difficulty
distinguishing between clustering caused by contagion and that caused by
changing relative risks. Therefore, any estimates of the boost effect
drawn from these tests alone will be upwardly biased.
We construct an agent-based model to generate simulated burglary data,
and explore whether the Knox test can reliably distinguish between
contagion (one burglary increases the likelihood of another burglary
nearby) and changes in risk (one area gets safer while another gets more
dangerous). Incorporating insights from this exercise, we analyze a
decade of data on burglary events from Washington, DC.
We find that (1) absent contagion, exogenous changes in relative risk
can be sufficient to produce statistically significant Knox ratios, (2)
if risk is changing over time, estimated Knox ratios are sensitive to
one's choice of time window, and (3) Knox ratios estimated from
Washington, DC burglary data are sensitive to one's choice of time
window, suggesting that long-run changes in relative risk are, in part,
driving empirical estimates of burglary's boost effect.
Researchers testing for contagion in empirical time series should take
precautions to distinguish true contagion from exogenous changes in
relative risks. Adjusting the time window of analysis is a useful
robustness check, and future studies should be supplemented with new
approaches like agent-based modeling or spatial econometric methods.
Tags
Agent-based modeling
Dynamics
Crime
burglary
patterns
Contagion
Victimization
Knox test
Repeat
Offender