1st Edition

Rebuilding Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design Strengthening the Links with Crime Science

Edited By Rachel Armitage, Paul Ekblom Copyright 2019
284 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

284 Pages
by Routledge

Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) is a practice-oriented approach to reduce the risk of offences such as burglary and fear of crime by modifying the built environment. In recent years, this approach has been criticised for duplicating terminology and for failing to integrate successfully with other approaches. Rebuilding Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design... Read more

1. Introduction



Paul Ekblom and Rachel Armitage



2. Moving home as a flight from crime: residential mobility as a cause and consequence of crime and a challenge to Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design



Michelle Rogerson and Ken Pease OBE



3. "Why my house?" – exploring the influence of residential housing design on burglar decision making



Rachel Armitage and Chris Joyce  



4. Using guardianship and Situational Crime Prevention (SCP) to strengthen Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED)



Danielle M. Reynald and Mateja Mihinjac



5. Sharpening up CPTED – towards an ontology based on crime science and ecology



Paul Ekblom



6. Simulating CPTED: computational agent-based models of crime and environmental design



Daniel Birks and Joseph Clare



7. Simulation of dependencies between armed response vehicles and CPTED measures in counter-terrorism resource allocation



Hervé Borrion, Octavian Ciprian Bordeanu and Sonia Toubaline



8. Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) in Malaysia: development of a tool to measure CPTED implementation in residential settings



Massoomeh Hedayati Marzbali, Aldrin Abdullah and Mohammad Javad Maghsoodi Tilaki



9. How to ruin CPTED



Ward A. Adams, Eric S. McCord and Marcus Felson



10. A decade developing the delivery of CPTED across Greater Manchester



Leanne Monchuk



11. Less crime, more vibrancy, by design   



Marcus Willcocks, Paul Ekblom and Adam Thorpe



12. Conclusion



Rachel Armitage and Paul Ekblom

Biography

Rachel Armitage is Professor of Criminology within the School of Human and Health Sciences at the University of Huddersfield, UK.





Paul Ekblom is Emeritus Professor of Design Against Crime at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, UK; and Visiting Professor at both UCL and the University of Huddersfield, UK.