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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
15 pages in length. The very essence of security management is to prevent crime before it occurs; while this may be an apparent observation, the extent to which it is realized within the scope of safety measures speaks to the need for greater focus upon crime pattern analysis. To understand the pattern of criminal activity is to possess the tools to thwart it from happening; that analysis of these myriad elements leads to preventive tactics illustrates how this approach can assist the security manager. Bibliography lists 11 sources.
Page Count:
15 pages (~225 words per page)
File: LM1_TLCCrimePat.rtf
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realized within the scope of safety measures speaks to the need for greater focus upon crime pattern analysis. To understand the pattern of criminal activity is to possess the
tools to thwart it from happening; that analysis of these myriad elements leads to preventive tactics illustrates how this approach can assist the security manager. II. REDUCING TRIGGERS Crime
occurs when people are pushed beyond a threshold, an invisible line between upholding civilized behavior and participating in antisocial activities that reflects differently for everyone. Working toward reducing the
incidence of triggers is at the very core of what crime pattern analysis strives to achieve. When security managers understand the direct correlation between certain events or activities and
the extent to which they trigger criminal behavior, then they are better equipped to remove those inciters. "Understanding the immediate triggers for criminal events is an important component of
situational crime prevention analysis: it permits the adoption of techniques that reduce the provocative elements in situations below trigger thresholds and thereby prevent crimes from happening. Road rage, conflicts
in pubs at closing time, unmonitored Internet chat rooms, and a neighbourhood resident trying to keep young children from loitering in the street in front of their school are all
examples of provocative situations that may escalate and trigger crimes."1 Human nature is defined by myriad elements, not the least of which
is the social need to categorize people into distinct groupings based upon certain criteria. These innate classifications can represent significant social power, as in the case of beauty, wealth
and status, or they can symbolize aspects of society that people would just as soon forget, such as criminal offenders. For these perpetrators to become able to fully function
...