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An econometric analysis of burglary in Ireland
Author(s)
Date Issued
2004
Date Available
2008-05-22T16:29:00Z
Abstract
This paper outlines an econometric model of the level of burglary in Ireland between 1952 and 1998. We explain the evolution of the trend in Burglary in terms of demographic factors: in this case the share of young males in the population, the macro-economy in the form of consumer expenditure and two characteristics of the criminal justice system : the detection rate for these crimes and the size of the prison population. The share of young males is
associated with higher levels of these crimes. Imprisonment and detection act
as powerful forces for reducing crimes, the effects of aggregate consumption are more difficult to pin down but we show that higher spending is associated with more lucrative but probably fewer crimes. One somewhat surprising result is that we were unable to find any robust effect from direct measures of labour market activity such as unemployment rates or wage levels.
associated with higher levels of these crimes. Imprisonment and detection act
as powerful forces for reducing crimes, the effects of aggregate consumption are more difficult to pin down but we show that higher spending is associated with more lucrative but probably fewer crimes. One somewhat surprising result is that we were unable to find any robust effect from direct measures of labour market activity such as unemployment rates or wage levels.
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
University College Dublin; Institute for the Study of Social Change (Geary Institute)
Series
ISSC Discussion Paper series
ISSC WP 2004/04
Copyright (Published Version)
UCD Geary Institute
Subject – LCSH
Burglary--Ireland
Crime--Sociological aspects
Burglary--Econometric models
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
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dennyk_workpap_021.pdf
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Format
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