Target Choices of Inner-City Illegal Taggers Demonstrate Consistency and Specificity
Target Choices of Inner-City Illegal Taggers Demonstrate Consistency and Specificity
Christophe Vandeviver Kuralarasan Kumar P. Jeffrey Brantingham Wim Bernasco a Ghent University, Ghent, Belgiumb University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USAc Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR), Amsterdam, the Netherlandsd University of Amsterdam, the NetherlandsChristophe Vandeviver is a research professor of criminology at Ghent University and an international research fellow at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR). His research interests include computational and quantitative criminology, spatial and temporal dimensions of crime and crime control, offender behavior, crime networks, and violence victimization.Kuralarasan Kumar is a postdoctoral fellow in quantitative criminology at Ghent University. He holds a PhD in Criminology from the University of Madras, Chennai, India. His research focuses on offenders’ location choices, spatial, and temporal crime patterns.Wim Bernasco is a senior researcher at the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR) and a professor by special appointment at the University of Amsterdam.P. Jeffrey Brantingham is a professor of archaeology at the University of California, Los Angeles. His research interests include human behavior in complex environments, mathematical and computational modeling, crime and policing, criminal street gangs, and cultural evolution.