UAA professor publishes article on "hot spots" in Encyclopedia of Community Policing and Problem Solving

by Michelle Saport  |   

UAA Professor Troy Payne contributed an article on "hot spots" to the Encyclopedia of Community Policing and Problem Solving.

UAA Professor Troy Payne contributed an article on "hot spots" to the Encyclopedia of Community Policing and Problem Solving.

UAA Justice Center faculty Troy Payne, Ph.D., recently published an article on "hot spots" in the new reference work by Sage Publishing, Encyclopedia of Community Policing and Problem Solving.

"Hot spots" refers to the spatiotemporal clustering of crime-that is, crime is not randomly distributed across time and space. Crime tends to cluster at both locations and times of day. Analyzing this clustering can often lead to clues to the immediate causes of the crime clusters, which in turn informs crime prevention practice.

This encyclopedia looks at community policing as a philosophy that supports the systematic use of partnerships and problem solving to proactively address the immediate conditions that give rise to public safety issues. The work is a collection of more than 150 entries by significant figures in the research field. Visit the Sage Publishing website for more information.

Creative Commons License "UAA professor publishes article on "hot spots" in Encyclopedia of Community Policing and Problem Solving" is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
July Archive