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The Kansas City preventive patrol experiment was a landmark experiment carried out between 1972 and 1973 by the Kansas City Police Department of Kansas City, Missouri.〔http://petermoskos.com/readings/kelling_et_al_1971_kansas_city_preventive_patrol.pdf〕 It was evaluated by the Police Foundation. It was designed to test the assumption that the presence (or potential presence) of police officers in marked cars reduced the likelihood of a crime being committed. It was the first study to demonstrate that research into the effectiveness of different policing styles could be carried out responsibly and safely. ==Design== The experiment was designed to answer the following questions: # Would citizens notice changes in the level of police patrol and crime? # Would different levels of visible police patrol affect recorded crime or the outcome of victim surveys? # Would citizen fear of crime and attendant behavior change as a result of differing patrol levels? # Would their degree of satisfaction with police change? The design took three different police beats in Kansas City, and varied patrol routine in them. The first group received no routine patrols, instead the police responded only to calls from residents. The second group had the normal level of patrols, while the third had two to three times as many patrols. This was upheld for 12 months, from 1 October 1972 to 30 September 1973. Victim surveys, reported crime rates, arrest data, a survey of local businesses, attitudinal surveys, and trained observers who monitored police-citizen interaction were used to gather data. These were taken before the start of the experiment (September 1972), and after (October 1973), giving 'before' and 'after' conditions for comparison. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Kansas City preventive patrol experiment」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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