Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration

Abstract Background Numerous studies have established that crime is highly concentrated among a small group of offenders. These findings have guided the development of various crime prevention strategies. The underlying theme of these strategies is that by focusing on the few offenders who are respo...

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Main Authors: Natalie N. Martinez, YongJei Lee, John E. Eck, SooHyun O
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-08-01
Series:Crime Science
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-017-0072-2
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spelling doaj-05b2982577c74d77a509b53ae26efb212020-11-25T03:05:25ZengBMCCrime Science2193-76802017-08-016111610.1186/s40163-017-0072-2Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentrationNatalie N. Martinez0YongJei Lee1John E. Eck2SooHyun O3School of Criminal Justice, University of CincinnatiSchool of Public Affairs, University of ColoradoSchool of Criminal Justice, University of CincinnatiSchool of Criminal Justice, University of CincinnatiAbstract Background Numerous studies have established that crime is highly concentrated among a small group of offenders. These findings have guided the development of various crime prevention strategies. The underlying theme of these strategies is that by focusing on the few offenders who are responsible for most of the crime, we can prevent the greatest amount of crime with the fewest resources. Nevertheless, there has been no systematic review of the many studies, so it is possible that the accepted understanding among researchers and practitioners is based on a few prominent studies that are misleading. Further, we do not know how concentrated crime is among offenders, given the variety of ways researchers report their findings. This paper systematically reviews this literature and uses meta-analysis to determine how confident we can be that crime is concentrated among a few offenders. Methods We first systematically reviewed the literature and found 73 studies on the concentration of crime among offenders. From those studies, we identified 15 studies on the prevalence of offending and 27 studies on the frequency of offending that provided data suitable for analysis. We then performed a meta-analysis of those studies to examine how crime is concentrated among the worst offenders and how that concentration varies between different types of offenders. Results We found that crime is highly concentrated in the population and across different types of offenders. Little variation in concentration exists between youths and adults or between American offenders and those from other countries. We found more variation between males and females in the concentration of offending, though we believe this may be due to the more limited data on female offenders. Conclusions The systematic review and meta-analysis we present here is the first study of its kind on offending concentration. This is an important step in closing this gap in the crime prevention literature, but we encourage making updates to this systematic review as new literature becomes available, and using alternate methods of summarizing these studies that could challenge these findings.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-017-0072-2Crime concentrationOffendingSystematic reviewMeta-analysis
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Natalie N. Martinez
YongJei Lee
John E. Eck
SooHyun O
spellingShingle Natalie N. Martinez
YongJei Lee
John E. Eck
SooHyun O
Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
Crime Science
Crime concentration
Offending
Systematic review
Meta-analysis
author_facet Natalie N. Martinez
YongJei Lee
John E. Eck
SooHyun O
author_sort Natalie N. Martinez
title Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
title_short Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
title_full Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
title_fullStr Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
title_full_unstemmed Ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
title_sort ravenous wolves revisited: a systematic review of offending concentration
publisher BMC
series Crime Science
issn 2193-7680
publishDate 2017-08-01
description Abstract Background Numerous studies have established that crime is highly concentrated among a small group of offenders. These findings have guided the development of various crime prevention strategies. The underlying theme of these strategies is that by focusing on the few offenders who are responsible for most of the crime, we can prevent the greatest amount of crime with the fewest resources. Nevertheless, there has been no systematic review of the many studies, so it is possible that the accepted understanding among researchers and practitioners is based on a few prominent studies that are misleading. Further, we do not know how concentrated crime is among offenders, given the variety of ways researchers report their findings. This paper systematically reviews this literature and uses meta-analysis to determine how confident we can be that crime is concentrated among a few offenders. Methods We first systematically reviewed the literature and found 73 studies on the concentration of crime among offenders. From those studies, we identified 15 studies on the prevalence of offending and 27 studies on the frequency of offending that provided data suitable for analysis. We then performed a meta-analysis of those studies to examine how crime is concentrated among the worst offenders and how that concentration varies between different types of offenders. Results We found that crime is highly concentrated in the population and across different types of offenders. Little variation in concentration exists between youths and adults or between American offenders and those from other countries. We found more variation between males and females in the concentration of offending, though we believe this may be due to the more limited data on female offenders. Conclusions The systematic review and meta-analysis we present here is the first study of its kind on offending concentration. This is an important step in closing this gap in the crime prevention literature, but we encourage making updates to this systematic review as new literature becomes available, and using alternate methods of summarizing these studies that could challenge these findings.
topic Crime concentration
Offending
Systematic review
Meta-analysis
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40163-017-0072-2
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