LPRC - CrimeScience Episode 44 – Situational Crime Prevention ft. Dr. Ron Clarke Part 2
Episode Date: April 28, 2020In this second episode with Dr. Ron Clarke, renowned criminologist and recipient of the Stockholm Prize of Criminology, we will continue our conversation on opportunity reduction techniques, the sco...pe of opportunity crime, the duty of criminologists, the security hypothesis, and much more. The post CrimeScience Episode 44 – Situational Crime Prevention ft. Dr. Ron Clarke Part 2 appeared first on Loss Prevention Research Council.
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Hi everyone, welcome to Crime Science. In this podcast, we aim to explore the science of crime and the practical application of the science for loss prevention and asset protection practitioners, as well as other professionals.
Co-host Dr. Reid Hayes of the Loss Prevention Research Council and Tom Meehan of ControlTech discuss a wide range of topics with industry experts, thought leaders, solution providers, and many more. Today's episode is part two of our discussion with Dr. Ron Clark, renowned criminologist. We will continue our conversation on opportunity reduction technique,
duty of criminologists, the scope of opportunity crime, domestic and international differences in
opportunity factors, the security hypothesis, and the rational choice perspective. We would like to
thank Bosch for making this episode possible. Be a leader in loss prevention by implementing
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You may be aware, I mean what we're doing is we we make full use of the the 24
techniques the but the big five if you will you know effort and risk and reward
and excuses. We're sort of using those in everyday use you know the term of those
are modes of action like in how a medication might work, of course.
But we're spending particularly a lot of time trying to understand
and articulate the mechanisms of action of a specific technique,
as you probably know.
And we're trying to get an idea of using crime scripting,
which you have been involved in.
using crime scripting, which you have been involved in, and how do we break these down into very usable steps and stages and aiming points. So there's a lot of good work from
what you've done that's, I think, now coming out. And we, you know, our team, it's unfortunate,
we get two to four journal articles a year. We don't live in journal world, though. We live in the real world, so we're working on about 40 projects a year.
But rest assured, Ron, all your thoughts and hard work is really, I think, paying dividends in a lot of ways.
But I know those that come after both of us will do a good thing.
Yeah, I believe so.
I mean, I think in one of your prep things for this session,
you asked why don't more criminologists do this kind of work?
It's a puzzle to me, frankly, why they, I mean, many criminologists just don't seem to think they have a, I call it a duty to deal with the problem.
with the problem. I think many, many criminologists
don't believe that their role is to actually reduce crime.
I think that is their role.
I don't think that if the general public were aware that most criminologists
are not interested in reducing crime,
I think they would be rather amazed so much money
and training and university courses
were devoted to the subject.
I don't think we're here just to,
I don't think our job is just to speculate about crime and think about it.
I think our main job is to deal with it,
or at least to, not ourselves directly,
but to find ways of dealing with it and to help people reduce the problems that crime causes.
I think that's what criminologists should be doing.
But that's a heresy to most of them or to many of them.
They just don't agree with that.
of them or to many of them, they just don't agree with that.
So I part company with most criminologists, really, just
for that simple reason.
We can almost look across campus and see an incredible
array of brand new research, but also
clinical places for UF Health, University of Florida.
And our university this year will probably accomplish over $950 million in sponsored
research, but overwhelmingly those funds and that research is, some is preclinical,
but most is clinical, whether we're talking about engineering or business or medicine and other disciplines, to use good theory and frameworks and rigorous methods, but at the end of the day, deliver value.
And in our case, like you're saying, we think our obligation, our first obligation is reduce victimization to protect or safeguard vulnerable people and places.
And so I appreciate all this preclinical and secondary data research that's out there.
A lot of good comes out of it, but you feel like the emergency room docs,
if there was only five or six of them and you got another 50,000 physicians over there working on cellular level research,
you know, people are hurting and dying over here. We need some help. So that's kind of where we fall
out. And the thing, of course, is that many people think that these types of approaches
we're advocating are really only for sort of trivial clients, like shoplifting.
Well, I don't agree with that. We know that opportunity, for example, matters a great
deal in homicide. The simplest example of that is the difference in the homicide rates between England and America.
And the fact that America has much higher, probably still about five or six times the homicide rate of England is due to one thing, the possession of guns.
That's an opportunity factor. In Britain, it's extremely hard to get hold of a gun,
especially a handgun, and it's handguns that are the main culprit in homicides in this country.
homicides in this country. So opportunity matters for a whole range of very serious crimes. I mean
I've done quite a lot of work for example on aircraft hijacking. And it's clear there that opportunity played a very big part in the great rise in
aircraft hijacking that took place in the 70s. Then, you know, the 9-11 hijackers found waste
around these safeguards that were introduced
and managed to take over those four aeroplanes.
But new measures introduced since then have pretty much wiped out the opportunities that
existed at the time of 9-11. And we haven't had any hijackings. Oh, well, very few very
oh well, very few, relatively unimportant events compared with the 9-11. That was simply due to opportunity reduction.
So, you know, opportunity matters for every form of crime.
And the sooner that we acknowledge that and get on with doing something about reducing the opportunities, the better it will be.
Yes, for mankind.
And I, as you know, we couldn't agree more here.
And we're working with 68 major retail companies across the globe at this point.
And theft and fraud and violence are paramount for
them. And it could be something as simple as shoplifting, but the shoplifting, as you know,
that we deal with sometimes is highly organized, and they fill warehouses full of items. Some of
the merchandise is converted, all of it's converted cash. Some has been used for to fund some terrorist activities but we're also
dealing quite a bit with intimidation and fear in parking lots that you know the retailers are in a
pitched life-or-death battle with convenient ordering merchandise by your phone or whatever
device so if that customer she doesn't feel comfortable getting out of her vehicle or mass transit
and making her way through your parking lot,
they've got a real problem.
If they don't feel safe because somebody has overdosed
in your restroom or, you know, we can think of
many, many other scenarios.
So the fear of crime, we've got armed robbery,
we've got burglaries, we've got active shooters.
And we're working with a couple of retailers on active shooting and what can we done in the opportunity area
because that's the only area they've really got yeah well um i think there's a very if i can change
the subject a little bit i think there's a tremendous um uh opportunity again for pushing this subject further in regard to the
international crime drop that has occurred in most westernized countries.
most westernized countries you know we've got much less crime street crime I'm not talking about cyber crime just the regular crime that we've all been bothered about we've got much less of that
now than we used to have and that is true in many other countries that crime has dropped.
Now, I believe strongly that that is due to opportunity reduction.
The explanations put forward for the drop in crime in America are very parochial and they mostly focus on propensity and motivation.
But those explanations that are put forward for American crime, the drop in America, don't
hold for other countries.
But many other countries have had similar crime jobs.
Yes, they have.
And I don't know if you're familiar with the work of Graham
Farrell and Jan van Dijk and others who are arguing
that the reason for the international crime drop
is a massive increase in security.
It's called the security hypothesis.
Have you been reading their work?
Yes, I have, Ron.
And I think one thing I found that was interesting too
is how widespread that is, Ron.
It's not isolated to typically from what I've read
to wealthier or places with more resources, but rather
even into less economically
advantaged places and really across the globe.
It isn't confined just to wealthy people.
What's happened is that many businesses and organizations have begun to realize that they can actually do something about reducing the victimizations that they or their clients or their customers suffer.
And they realize that nobody else is going to help them do this.
It requires too much specific knowledge and too much specific type interventions, which
only they can do to protect themselves and that has led to a very, over the last 20 years let's say, in all kinds
of spheres of life, has led to an enormous reduction in ordinary opportunities to commit
crime and that has benefited this country and many others that are like this country.
Sadly, those lessons haven't yet been learned in the developed world.
I went to a conference the other day, which was about crime in South America and Central America.
Now the people who were speaking were very, very smart
and intelligent in the sense that they could analyze things,
you know, analyze phenomena very well.
But mostly they were not looking at opportunities.
They were still concerned with motivation,
motivation in the general sense.
The lessons that we have learned hard about reducing crime
haven't spread to the developing world yet.
And the crime there
is much much worse than we experience nowadays in our own country. So there's a long way to go yet to get these lessons across.
Let me ask you Ron if I could, I mentioned rational choice perspective,
your training, your background, your orientation is around psychology.
So there is some of that.
We're trying to communicate to people and convince people not to do something, or at
least not here and now.
What could you maybe do a brief description about rational choice, that perspective, and
how that saturates what we try and do, all of us, in crime prevention.
Yes, okay. The rational choice perspective that Derek Cornish and I developed is actually quite complex.
It sounds a simple idea. I mean, most people think it's just a sort of development of economic theory.
It actually goes a lot further than Becker's ideas of rational choice and crime, and even going back, you know, further than that,
the way that we laid out rational choice perspective, we had, this is Derek and I,
we had a number of premises we developed.
First of all, offenders, the first one is
offenders commit crimes to benefit themselves in whatever way we might
think they wanted to benefit, not just economically, but there are dozens and
dozens of different motives for crime as opposed to motivation.
And the rational choice perspective
seeks to identify what are the motives for very specific forms of crime.
That was the first and fundamental
premise.
Second, because of risks and uncertainties, offenders often make poor decisions.
In other words, they may think they're benefiting themselves,
but because there's big limitations in what they know about the results of crime and what's going to happen to them and whether they're going to get caught
and that kind of thing means that they often make poor decisions to commit a crime
and they shouldn't.
So we have a second premise of bounded rationality.
We don't think that offenders are highly rational.
They do the best they can to make decisions that they think will benefit themselves,
but they often make mistakes and don't have enough data and so on.
So it's bounded rationality.
Next thing I think is that this is very important.
Offender decision-making varies with the crime.
This is a very important premise, the premise of crime specificity.
Crimes, we tend as criminologists, criminologists tend to be overgeneralized about crime.
overgeneralize about crime. In fact, there is enormous specificity. So just to illustrate this, I often give the example of car theft. So there's many different kinds of things that
can be called car thefts. For example, stealing hubcaps for resale or badges for collections
you know badges of mercedes badges or something breaking into cars to steal items left inside
breaking into cars and stealing radios and other fittings that they can sell and joyriding by juveniles where they just take the car, drive it around
and dump it.
Taking a car for temporary transportation, stealing a car for use in another crime, stealing
and keeping a car, stealing cars for chopping and sale of their parts,
stealing cars for resale, stealing cars for export overseas, and carjacking.
Now that's just a rough list of how many different forms of crime can be called car theft and each of those different forms of crime are
really quite different and have to be analyzed carefully separately to see
what is the opportunity structure for each and you, just a little thought shows you that the people involved in stealing cars
for shopping and sale of the parts are very different from joyriders, joyriding juveniles,
completely different groups of people.
The opportunity structures for those two different forms of car theft are worlds apart.
And we need to, if we're going to address these crimes properly,
we have to acknowledge that fact that specificity is extremely important.
So that's another basic premise of the rational choice perspective, specificity.
Then Derek and I thought, well, decisions about involvement in particular kinds of crime are quite different from the decisions relating to a specific criminal event.
You have to have different models for both.
And if you take involvement decisions,
there's three different stages of involvement.
That's initiation, getting into that kind of crime,
habituation, carrying on with it,
and desistance, stopping doing it.
All those things are different.
And lastly, I think our last premise was that
every decision involves, event decisions, sorry, event decisions, that's the decisions taken in a particular criminal event, involve a sequence of choices made during preparation, target selection, commission of the act, and aftermath.
act an aftermath all the modus operandi has to be unpacked so the rational choice perspective
is much more complicated than most people would imagine and it implies a very detailed approach to thinking about crime prevention than most people would imagine.
You know, most people think it's a rational choice.
Well, the offender is committing a crime.
He's weighing up the chances of getting caught.
Therefore, all we need to do is increase
the penalties. Well, rational choice perspective doesn't believe that punishment or doesn't advocate
punishment because most of the punishment theory is not being supported by research.
Punishment doesn't work very well.
So anyway, that's rather a long answer to your question
about the rational choice perspective,
but I'm really just trying to show
that it's a very complex way of looking at crime.
However, we have to do it. We have to do this. We
have to get, we have to become specific and detailed and think hard about the opportunity
structures of any specific kind of crime if we're going to do anything about it.
of crime if we're going to do anything about it and we we we take up that mantle as you know ron and with the the practitioners from all these retailers and law enforcement that we're working
with we use the framework we try and help them break down what you were just talking about into
diagnostics as well as now we can be more focused. We're obviously very purposeful,
and now we can have more accurate measurement to see what kind of effects do we get from the treatments or the options.
So it's huge.
I know my father's physician would tell us there are over 50 reasons your head hurts,
and you might want to know why your head hurts.
And that's where you're going, that it could be you're hungry you're under stress
could be much more serious so um that's but so we can't treat anything if we don't know what the
problem is and that they're so different well it's good to hear you doing that well i know you're
doing that sort of detailed work it has to happen uh it does pay off in the end but it looks um it
looks so different from most people's ideas about reducing crime that it's hard to persuade people that this is the way to go.
That's our collective challenge.
And I think what we'd like to do is kind of roll, wrap things up here.
What do you recommend?
up here, what do you recommend? People coming into the crime prevention, criminal justice, but
in our case, the criminology field or crime science field that
really would like to make a difference, that really want to make people and places a little safer
and more secure. What's your advice?
Well, my advice
is to become very familiar with environmental criminology and crime science.
That's the simplest advice I could give. Forget most of what is taught in criminology degrees
and take with a pinch of salt what is often offered in crime prevention thinking.
And you know, all this stuff provides young people with a very clear
root for doing their work.
It's a model that works.
And it's crucial in science to have a decent theory.
I think that environmental criminology and crime science is a good set of theories that helps people, you know, really make a difference.
So that would be my simple answer to your question.
Well, that's a great answer.
And, Ron, I want to thank you so much for coming on the Crime Science Podcast.
It's heard around the world by all types of people, academics and practitioners alike.
And I really look forward to, as you and I mentioned before the podcast,
kind of conferring, brainstorming, sharing ideas in the UK and England late this summer at ECHA.
I think you'll enjoy ECHA very much.
I'm really looking forward to it. It's finally an opportunity to get involved with ECHA.
I'm really looking forward to it.
It's finally an opportunity to get involved with that guy.
So I wish you all the best.
And again, a huge thanks for all you've done and continue to do in the field of protecting people through crime science and crime prevention.
Yeah.
And at the moment, just my last word is I'm now thinking about protecting animals.
Excellent. Excellent.
Excellent.
So, you know, environmental criminology means shaping the environment to influence decisions.
In your case, it also means doing that to protect the environment.
Yeah.
So, fantastic.
Yeah.
So, brilliant work.
Thank you, Patrick, for inviting me.
Thank you, Ron.
You have a great one.
Thank you so much. Reed, for inviting me. Thank you, Ron. You have a great one. Thank you so much.
Bye-bye.
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