4.7 Article

Malignant mixes: The overlap of motor vehicle crashes and crime in Stockholm, Sweden

Journal

ACCIDENT ANALYSIS AND PREVENTION
Volume 161, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.aap.2021.106361

Keywords

Traffic crashes; Crime offences; Hot spots; Spatial regression; GIS

Funding

  1. Fulbright Commission [FSP-P002439]

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The study in Stockholm, Sweden identified common socio-economic, land use, and neighborhood characteristics in areas where motor vehicle crashes and crimes occur. These events tended to concentrate in small hot spots, with specific patterns related to roadway traffic volume, lower income neighborhoods, and certain common land uses like underground stations, ATMs, and alcohol-serving establishments. The impact of these events on emergency services and the police was also discussed.
Places that concentrate both motor vehicle crashes and crime in Stockholm, Sweden were examined for common socio-economic, land use, and neighborhood characteristics. Using vehicle crash (N = 3,700) and non-traffic crime (N = 605,052) data from 2016 to 2018, hot spots of these two sets of events and their overlap were identified. Crash hot spots captured 14% of the crashes in only 0.5% of Stockholm's area while crime hot spots captured 27% of the recorded offences in less than 1% of the area. There was overlap in these hot spots for 7% of the crashes and 10% of the crimes. To model predictors, the events were allocated to roadway segments (N = 5511) and tested using a Poisson-Gamma-CAR spatial regression model. Both crashes and crimes exhibit a clear center-periphery pattern that varies over time and by type of crashes and crimes. Crashes tended to occur on roadways with higher average daily traffic (ADT) while crimes tend to occur on roadways with lower ADT with around half occurring on residential streets. Both types of incidents tended to be higher in lower income neighborhoods. Land uses common to both types of harm were the location of underground stations, ATM machines, and alcohol-serving businesses. These are places where people and cars converge at particular times. The effect of these events on police, emergency, and medical services is discussed.

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