Search
for books by Author,
Title or Subject



Complete List of Publications

View Shopping Cart

Print the Order Form (pdf)


Criminal Justice Press
PO Box 249
Monsey, NY 10952 USA
Fax: 603-357-2073
Phone: 800-345-6665
E-mail: cjpress109@aol.com


Examination Copy Policy

How to Submit
Book Proposals

Books On:

Crime Prevention Studies

Crime and Delinquency

Criminal and Juvenile Justice

Restorative Justice

Book Info


Preventing Mass Transit Crime (Crime Prevention Studies, vol. 6)
Ronald V. Clarke, ed.
(Paperback)
1997, 261 pages
ISBN: 1-881798-28-3
$42.50

An anthology presents 8 previously unpublished studies on the use of situational crime prevention in urban mass transit systems. Marcus Felson et al.'s evaluation of 1991-1992 modifications in New York City's Port Authority Bus Terminal--involving situational prevention combined with environmental measures--indicates that the changes made the huge complex much less of a crime generator, crime attractor and fear generator. Situational measures adopted to curb pay phone toll fraud at the same facility were also effective, according to Gisela Bichler and Ronald V. Clarke. Robert R. Weidner's evaluation found that "high-wheel" turnstiles were somewhat effective in preventing fare evasion at a New York City subway station, with little evidence of displacement. According to Paul Barclay et al., deployment of a bicycle-mounted security patrol at a commuter parking lot in Vancouver (CAN) that had been a stolen vehicle "hot spot" produced a substantial drop in thefts. Nancy G. LaVigne documents the Washington, DC Metro commuter train's success in designing out crime. Plans for designing security into the new Meteor metro line in Paris, FR are assessed in light of crime prevention strategies by Marina L. Myhre and Fabien Rosso. The hypothesis that streets robberies are more likely to occur at intermediate levels of pedestrian traffic is not confirmed in Clarke et al.'s study of 206 New York City subway stations. Richard Block and Sean Davis analyze whether the environs of rapid transit stations in Chicago, IL area magnets for street robberies.

Criminal Justice Press Home

copyright 2008 Criminal Justice Press