Author: Terence B. Whin-Yates
Crime attractors are activity nodes to which people travel for the purpose of committing some specific crime. Crime generators are high-volume activity nodes where people commit crimes as a by-product of being present for other purposes. This study examines the attractor and generator using the crime pattern theory and will use several examples: open illegal drug markets, an established street prostitution area, break and enters and motor vehicle theft, and crime near rapid transit stations.
Terence B. Whin-Yates
Crime Prevention Analysis Lab (CPAL)
Simon Fraser University
8888 University Drive
Burnaby, V5A 1S6
Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Telephone: 604-420-5314
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