The use of spatial analytical techniques to highlight the geography of burglary in Leeds, UK.

The use of spatial analytical techniques to highlight the geography of burglary in Leeds, UK.

Socio-demographic classification of attributes of burglary was carried out. The aim was to highlight the geography of burglary across Leeds using housing/socio-economic related data. Three hypotheses were formulated: (i) the denser the residential areas, the higher the likelihood of it being burglars’ target. (ii) The denser the population and activities, the higher the burglary rate. (iii) The higher the territory’s level of ethnic heterogeneity, the higher the probability of burglary incidence. The K-means technique was used to analyse the data. The hypotheses were upheld. It reveals that the bulk of burglary occur at central south-western part of Leeds which is the city centre with high business activities, population with high diversity and residences. The limitation of the technique is the inability to handle temporal dimension. To have best output, it should be used together with other techniques.

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  • Anwar Musah: Institute of risk and Disaster Reduction University College London, a.musah@ucl.ac.uk
  • Wim Bernasco, Netherlands Institute for study of crime, bernasco@nscr.nl