Exploring the geography of suicide threats and suicide attempts: An application of Risk Terrain Modeling

2020 ◽  
Vol 249 ◽  
pp. 112860 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kim M. Lersch
2021 ◽  
pp. 073401682199679
Author(s):  
Branson Fox ◽  
Anne Trolard ◽  
Mason Simmons ◽  
Jessica E. Meyers ◽  
Matt Vogel

This study employs risk terrain modeling to identify the spatial correlates of aggravated assault and homicide in St. Louis, MO. We build upon the empirical literature by (1) replicating recent research examining the role of vacancy in the concentration of criminal violence and (2) examining whether the environmental correlates of violence vary between north and south St. Louis, a boundary that has long divided the city along racial and socioeconomic lines. Our results indicate that vacancy presents a strong, consistent risk for both homicide and aggravated assault and that this pattern emerges most clearly in the northern part of the city which is majority African American and has suffered chronic disinvestment. The concentration of criminal violence in South City is driven primarily by public hubs including housing, transportation, and schools. Our results underscore the importance of vacancy as a driver of the spatial concentration of violent crime and point to potential heterogeneity in risk terrain modeling results when applied to large metropolitan areas. Situational crime prevention strategies would be well served to consider such spatial contingencies as the risk factors driving violent crime are neither uniformly distributed across space nor uniform in their impact on criminal violence.


2015 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 529-548 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leslie W. Kennedy ◽  
Joel M. Caplan ◽  
Eric L. Piza ◽  
Henri Buccine-Schraeder

2019 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 441-459 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek Vildosola ◽  
Julian Carter ◽  
Eric R. Louderback ◽  
Shouraseni Sen Roy

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (19-20) ◽  
pp. 4013-4039 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marco Dugato ◽  
Francesco Calderoni ◽  
Giulia Berlusconi

Mafia homicides are usually committed for retaliation, economic profit, or rivalry among groups. The variety of possible reasons suggests the inefficacy of a preventive approach. However, like most violent crimes, mafia homicides concentrate in space due to place-specific social and environmental features. Starting from the existing literature, this study applies the Risk Terrain Modeling approach to forecast the Camorra homicides in Naples, Italy. This approach is based on the identification and evaluation of the underlying risk factors able to affect the risk of a homicide. This information is then used to predict the most likely location of future events. The findings of this study demonstrate that past homicides, drug dealing, confiscated assets, and rivalries among groups make it possible to predict up to 85% of 2012 mafia homicides, identifying 11% of city areas at highest risk. By contrast, variables controlling for the socio-economic conditions of areas are not significantly related to the risk of homicide. Moreover, this study shows that, even in a restricted space, the same risk factors may combine in different ways, giving rise to areas of equal risk but requiring targeted remedies. These results provide an effective basis for short- and long-term targeted policing strategies against organized crime- and gang-related violence. A similar approach may also provide practitioners, policy makers, and local administrators in other countries with significant support in understanding and counteracting also other forms of violent behavior by gangs or organized crime groups.


2016 ◽  
Vol 62 ◽  
pp. 29-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dyann Daley ◽  
Michael Bachmann ◽  
Brittany A. Bachmann ◽  
Christian Pedigo ◽  
Minh-Thuy Bui ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Mary C. Zanarini

Self-mutilation and help-seeking suicide threats and attempts are among the few almost pathognomonic symptoms of BPD. This chapter assesses predictors of self-harm and reasons for self-harm over time. It also assesses predictors of suicide threats and attempts over the years of prospective follow-up. Each outcome has a different set of multivariate predictors, but some appear in several multivariate models. More specifically, sexual adversity in childhood and adulthood, major depression, and severity of dissociation are predictors of self-mutilation; and sexual adversity in adulthood, major depression, and severity of dissociation are predictors of suicide attempts. However, these factors do not play a role in predicting suicide threats. Instead, two dysphoric affective states and two outmoded interpersonal survival strategies are the best set of predictors of suicide threats.


2020 ◽  
pp. 073401682093885
Author(s):  
Hannah Steinman ◽  
Grant Drawve ◽  
Jyotishka Datta ◽  
Casey T. Harris ◽  
Shaun A. Thomas

The spatial elements of crime occurrence and the identification of crime generators/attractors have remained a prominent area of research. We focus on the utility of the 80-20 rule and the labeling of risky facilities in crime forecasting models with risk terrain modeling (RTM). We first examine whether the rule holds across types of crime generating places including liquor stores, department stores, hotels/motels, restaurants/bars, and apartment complexes. Next, we use our findings to test whether conducting preliminary analyses to identify risky facilities increases the predictive power of RTM versus using all possible facilities. When restricting the RTM approach to only risky facilities, results were more accurate than a traditional RTM approach. Findings and implications are nested in the utilization of the wider body of environmental criminology research to increase our understanding of where crime is likely to occur.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document