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  2. Environmental crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_crime

    Causes of environmental crime include economic incentives, regulatory factors, and social/cultural factors. Illegal activities are driven by regulations creating cost differentials between legal and illegal products, compliance costs in different countries, demand for scarce products, and lack of concern for the environment.

  3. Environmental criminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Environmental_criminology

    Environmental criminology is the study of crime, criminality, and victimization as they relate, first, to particular places, and secondly, to the way that individuals and organizations shape their activities spatially, and in so doing are in turn influenced by place-based or spatial factors.

  4. Green criminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_criminology

    Green criminology is a branch of criminology that involves the study of harms and crimes against the environment broadly conceived, including the study of environmental law and policy, the study of corporate crimes against the environment, and environmental justice from a criminological perspective. [1]

  5. Routine activity theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Routine_activity_theory

    A graphical model of the routine activity theory. The theory stipulates three necessary conditions for most crime; a likely offender, a suitable target, and the absence of a capable guardian, coming together in time and space. The lack of any of the three elements is sufficient to prevent a crime which requires offender-victim contact.

  6. Correlates of crime - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Correlates_of_crime

    The correlates of crime explore the associations of specific non-criminal factors with specific crimes. The field of criminology studies the dynamics of crime. Most of these studies use correlational data; that is, they attempt to identify various factors are associated with specific categories of criminal behavior.

  7. Lead Paint Violations In Homes With Young Children. More than 75 percent of all violations for lead paint conditions in units with children under the age of 6 are found in areas where the poverty rate exceeds the city's average of 21 percent, according to a Huffington Post / WNYC analysis of government data.

  8. Crime opportunity theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_opportunity_theory

    Crime opportunity theory suggests that offenders make rational choices and thus choose targets that offer a high reward with little effort and risk. The occurrence of a crime depends on two things: the presence of at least one motivated offender who is ready and willing to engage in a crime, and the conditions of the environment in which that offender is situated, to wit, opportunities for crime.

  9. Lead–crime hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lead–crime_hypothesis

    After decades of increasing crime across the industrialised world, crime rates started to decline sharply in the 1990s, a trend that continued into the new millennium. Many explanations have been proposed, including situational crime prevention and interactions between many other factors with complex, multifactorial causation. [1]