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Alcohol Availability and Violent Crime Rates: A Spatial Analysis

NCJ Number
189283
Journal
Journal of Crime & Justice Volume: 24 Issue: 1 Dated: 2001 Pages: 71-83
Author(s)
S. E. Costanza; William B. Bankston; Edward Shihadeh
Date Published
2001
Length
13 pages
Annotation
This paper examines the relationship between alcohol availability in urban areas and arrest rates for violent crime.
Abstract
The paper focuses on the influence that alcohol outlet density (measured both as the density of package-only sources and of taverns) has on the level of robbery and assault. Previous research found alcohol availability to be predictive of violence, but ecological studies had methodological limitations, particularly the problem of spatial autocorrelation. This paper avoids the problem by using the Maximum Likelihood Estimation technique. Results indicate that, net of the effects of control variables and of the effects of spatial autocorrelation, the density of package-only outlets significantly increases the rate of arrest for both crimes. The density of taverns had no such effect. The paper includes a control/routine-activities interpretation of the findings. It concludes that differences in alcohol availability does not inherently influence predatory crime across neighborhoods. Thus, future research should attempt to specify the mediating, intervention, and contextual influences on alcohol availability, consumption, and crime patterns. Tables, references