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Cost-benefit analysis for crime prevention: opportunity costs, routine savings and crime externalities.

journal contribution
posted on 2006-02-14, 14:45 authored by John Roman, Graham Farrell
Research on cost-benefit analysis of situational crime prevention is examined and found wanting. The few existing studies do not accurately represent the likely benefits of the situational approach. While measures of non-monetary crime costs are improving, at least four other key areas warrant more attention.

History

School

  • Social Sciences

Department

  • Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies

Research Unit

  • Midlands Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice

Pages

228253 bytes

Citation

ROMAN, J. and FARRELL, G., 2002. Cost-benefit analysis for crime prevention: opportunity costs, routine savings and crime externalities. IN: N. Tilley (Ed.) Evaluation for Crime Prevention, Crime Prevention Studies, 14, pp. 53-92.

Publisher

© Criminal Justice Press

Publication date

2002

Language

  • en

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