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The City that Became Safe - New York's Lessons for Urban Crime and Its Control (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,289
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The City that Became Safe - New York's Lessons for Urban Crime and Its Control (Hardcover)
Series: Studies in Crime and Public Policy
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The 40% drop in crime that occurred across the U.S. from 1991 to
2000 largely remains an unsolved mystery. Even more puzzling then
is the crime rate drop in New York City, which lasted twice long
and was twice as large. This 80% drop in crime over nineteen years
represents the largest crime decline on record. In The City that
Became Safe, Franklin Zimring sets off in search of the New York
difference through a detailed and comprehensive statistical
investigation into the city's falling crime rates and possible
explanations. If you listen to City Hall, aggressive police created
a zero tolerance law enforcement regime that drove crime rates
down. Is this self-serving political sound bite true? Are the
official statistics generated by the police accurate? Zimring shows
the numbers are correct and argues that some combination of more
cops, new tactics, and new management can take some credit for the
decline, but zero tolerance policing and quality of life were never
a consistent part of the NYPD's strategy. That the police can make
a difference in preventing crime overturns decades of conventional
wisdom for criminologists, but Zimring points out the New York
experience challenges the major assumptions dominating American
crime and drug control policies that most everyone else has missed.
First, imprisonment in actually New York decreased significantly
from 1990 to 2009 and was well below the national average, proving
that it is possible to have substantially less crime without
increases in incarceration. Second, the NYPD sharply reduced drug
violence (over 90%) without any reduction in hard drug use. In
other words, they won the war on drug violence without winning the
war on drugs. Finally, the stability of New York's population,
economy, education, demographics, or immigration patterns calls
into question the long-accepted cultural and structural causes of
violence in America's cities. That high rates of crime are not hard
wired into modern city life is welcome news for policy makers,
criminal justice officials, and urban dwellers everywhere.
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