Property Crime
Introduction
Property crime has been defined in a variety of ways. A typical definition mirrors that of the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reports, which defines property crime as the taking of property without physical force or threats. But in the real world, property crime sometimes does entail violence. Although not standard, the broadest and simplest definition of property crime is as follows: illegal activity involving the transfer or destruction of property, including money, cars, jewelry, shoes, drugs, or other forms of wealth, whether or not violence is used or threatened in doing so. The value of not excluding violent forms of theft from the definition of property crime is that it broadens our focus but simplifies our subject matter. There are different kinds of property crime, including violent, fraudulent, stealthy, destructive, and entrepreneurial. Defined thusly, examples of property crime include robbery, kidnapping, carjacking, tax evasion, fraud, burglary, auto theft, shoplifting, vandalism, arson, fencing, and illegal drug trade. This bibliography reviews some of the key data sources, theories, research, and policy discussions for understanding the distribution, causes, and consequences of property crime.
Types of Property Crime
Property crimes can be classified according to whether they involve violence, fraud, stealth, destruction, or entrepreneurialism. Violent property crime is defined here as the use of physical force against a person to take their property; classic examples include robbery and carjacking. Fraudulent property crime is defined as the use of deception (and not violence) to steal property; examples include embezzlement and tax evasion. Stealthy property crime is defined as the nonconsensual, nonviolent, and nonfraudulent theft of property when the owner is effectively absent; examples include burglary and auto theft. Destructive property crime is defined as the illicit damaging or destruction of property; examples include arson and vandalism. Entrepreneurial property crime is defined as the illegal manufacturing, selling, buying, giving, or receiving of property. All kinds of property crime—violent, fraudulent, stealthy, destructive, and entrepreneurial—are quantitative variables that may vary in their rate and magnitude across time and space. The goal of governments is to reduce such crimes; the goal of scientists is to document and explain them.
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Article
- Active Offender Research
- Airport and Airline Security
- Alcohol Use, Policy and Crime
- Animals, Crimes Against
- Anomie
- Biosocial Criminology
- Black's Theory of Law and Social Control
- Boot Camps and Shock Incarceration Programs
- Burglary, Residential
- Capital Punishment
- Chicago School of Criminology, The
- Community Change and Crime
- Community Corrections
- Community Disadvantage and Crime
- Comparative Criminal Justice Systems
- Control Balance Theory
- Costs of Crime and Justice
- Courts, Problem-Solving
- Crime Control Policy
- Crime Prevention, Situational
- Crime Trends
- Criminal Career Research
- Criminal Justice Ethics
- Criminal Justice System, Discretion in the
- Criminal Retaliation
- Critical Criminology
- Cross-National Crime
- Cultural Criminology
- Cultural Theories
- Cybercrime
- Desistance
- Developmental and Life-Course Criminology
- Drug Control
- Drug Trafficking, International
- Drugs and Crime
- Environmental Crime and Justice
- Experimental Criminology
- False and Coerced Confessions
- Family Violence
- Fear of Crime and Perceived Risk
- Feminist Theories
- Firearms and Violence
- Gangs, Peers, and Co-offending
- Gender and Crime
- Genetics, Environment, and Crime
- Hate Crime
- Hirschi, Travis
- History of Police
- Homicide
- Homicide Victimization
- Human Rights
- Human Trafficking
- Identity Theft
- Immigration, Crime, and Justice
- Incarceration, Mass
- Institutional Anomie Theory
- Integrated Theory
- Interpersonal Violence, Historical Patterns of
- Investigation, Criminal
- Juvenile Delinquency
- Juvenile Justice System, The
- Labor Markets and Crime
- Legitimacy
- Local Institutions and Neighborhood Crime
- Mapping and Spatial Analysis of Crime, The
- Mass Media, Crime, and Justice
- Measuring Crime
- Meta-analysis in Criminology
- Motor Vehicle Theft
- Neutralization Theory
- Offender Decision-Making and Motivation
- Offense Specialization/Expertise
- Organized Crime
- Performance Measurement and Accountability Systems
- Personality and Trait Theories of Crime
- Phenomenological Theories of Crime
- Police Administration
- Police Effectiveness
- Police, Race and the
- Policing and Law Enforcement
- Policing, Community and Problem-Oriented
- Policing, Privatization of
- Prisoner Reentry
- Prisons and Jails
- Property Crime
- Prosecution and Courts
- Prostitution
- Public Criminology
- Public Opinion, Crime and Justice
- Public Order Crimes
- Punishment Justification and Goals
- Race, Ethnicity, Crime, and Justice
- Racial Profiling
- Rape and Sexual Assault
- Rational Choice Theories
- Rehabilitation
- Restorative Justice
- Routine Activity Theories
- School Crime and Violence
- Seasonality and Crime
- Self-Control, The General Theory:
- Sentencing Guidelines
- Sentencing Policy
- Sex Crimes
- Sex Trafficking
- Situational Action Theory
- Snitching and Use of Criminal Informants
- Social Construction of Crime, The
- Social Control Theory
- Social Disorganization
- Social Ecology of Crime
- Social Learning Theory
- Social Networks
- Social Threat and Social Control
- Social and Intellectual Context of Criminology, The
- South Africa, Crime and Justice in
- Sport Mega-Events Security
- State Crime
- Strain Theories
- Street Robbery
- Substance Use and Abuse
- Surveillance, Public and Private
- Sutherland, Edwin H.
- Terrorism
- Testimony, Eyewitness
- Trajectory Methods in Criminology
- Transnational Crime
- Truth-In-Sentencing
- Urban Politics and Crime
- Victimization Patterns and Trends
- Victimization, Repeat
- Violence Against Women
- Violent Crime
- White-Collar Crime
- Wrongful Conviction