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Strategic Analysis of Crime: Criminal Tactics as Responses to Precriminal Situations (From Routine Activity and Rational Choice: Advances in Criminological Theory, Volume 5, P 295-304, 1993, Ronald V. Clarke and Marcus Felson, eds. - See NCJ-159998)

NCJ Number
160011
Author(s)
M Cusson
Date Published
1993
Length
10 pages
Annotation
This chapter discusses the rational choice perspective in terms of its use in thinking about crime in a strategic manner.
Abstract
The concepts associated with rational choice, and which can be applied to the analysis of crime as a calculating behavior in the context of conflict, include limited rationality, opportunity, routine activities, and choice structuring properties. The first section of the chapter defines three components of a criminal event -- the search, the precriminal situation, and the criminal tactics. These elements are then used to explain the proliferation of mundane predatory crime over the last 40 years. The author discusses characteristics of contemporary crime, the evolution of target protection, and the emergence of modern policing to describe current crime patterns. 1 note and 31 references

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