The Effect of COVID-19 Restrictions on Routine Activities and Online Crime.

IF 2.8 1区 社会学 Q1 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY Journal of Quantitative Criminology Pub Date : 2022-12-08 DOI:10.1007/s10940-022-09564-7
Shane D Johnson, Manja Nikolovska
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Abstract

Objectives: Routine activity theory suggests that levels of crime are affected by peoples' activity patterns. Here, we examine if, through their impact on people's on- and off-line activities, COVID-19 restriction affected fraud committed on- and off-line during the pandemic. Our expectation was that levels of online offending would closely follow changes to mobility and online activity-with crime increasing as restrictions were imposed (and online activity increased) and declining as they were relaxed. For doorstep fraud, which has a different opportunity structure, our expectation was that the reverse would be true.

Method: COVID-19 restrictions systematically disrupted people's activity patterns, creating quasi-experimental conditions well-suited to testing the effects of "interventions" on crime. We exploit those conditions using ARIMA time series models and UK data for online shopping fraud, hacking, doorstep fraud, online sales, and mobility to test hypotheses. Doorstep fraud is modelled as a non-equivalent dependent variable, allowing us to test whether findings were selective and in line with theoretical expectations.

Results: After controlling for other factors, levels of crime committed online were positively associated with monthly variation in online activities and negatively associated with monthly variation in mobility. In contrast, and as expected, monthly variation in doorstep fraud was positively associated with changes in mobility.

Conclusions: We find evidence consistent with routine activity theory, suggesting that disruptions to people's daily activity patterns affect levels of crime committed both on- and off-line. The theoretical implications of the findings, and the need to develop a better evidence base about what works to reduce online crime, are discussed.

Supplementary information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10940-022-09564-7.

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COVID-19 限制对日常活动和网络犯罪的影响。
目的:常规活动理论认为,犯罪率受人们活动模式的影响。在此,我们将研究 COVID-19 限制是否会通过对人们在线和离线活动的影响来影响大流行期间的在线和离线欺诈行为。我们的预期是,网上犯罪水平会紧随流动性和网上活动的变化而变化--随着限制措施的实施(网上活动增加),犯罪率会上升,而随着限制措施的放松,犯罪率会下降。对于机会结构不同的上门诈骗,我们的预期正好相反:方法:COVID-19 限制措施系统性地扰乱了人们的活动模式,创造了非常适合测试 "干预措施 "对犯罪影响的准实验条件。我们利用 ARIMA 时间序列模型和英国的网购欺诈、黑客攻击、上门欺诈、在线销售和流动性数据来验证这些假设。上门欺诈被模拟为非等效因变量,使我们能够检验研究结果是否具有选择性,是否符合理论预期:结果:在控制了其他因素后,网上犯罪水平与网上活动的月度变化呈正相关,而与流动性的月度变化呈负相关。相反,正如预期的那样,上门诈骗的月度变化与流动性的变化呈正相关:我们发现了与日常活动理论一致的证据,表明人们日常活动模式的中断会影响在线和离线犯罪的水平。文中讨论了研究结果的理论意义,以及为减少网上犯罪建立更好的证据基础的必要性:在线版本包含补充材料,可在10.1007/s10940-022-09564-7上查阅。
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来源期刊
Journal of Quantitative Criminology
Journal of Quantitative Criminology CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY-
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.80%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: The Journal of Quantitative Criminology focuses on research advances from such fields as statistics, sociology, geography, political science, economics, and engineering. This timely journal publishes papers that apply quantitative techniques of all levels of complexity to substantive, methodological, or evaluative concerns of interest to the criminological community. Features include original research, brief methodological critiques, and papers that explore new directions for studying a broad range of criminological topics.
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