Hajna Samantha, Cummins Steven
Department of Health Sciences, Brock University, 1812 Sir Isaac Brock Way, St. Catharines, ON, Canada.
Child Health Informatics Group, Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, UCL, London, UK.
Urban For Urban Green. 2023 Jun;84:127934. doi: 10.1016/j.ufug.2023.127934. Epub 2023 Apr 11.
Park crimes may have increased during the COVID-19 pandemic as a result of lockdowns that limited the number of capable guardians in public spaces. Despite this, the impacts of the lockdowns on park crimes remain unknown. To help us understand the societal impacts of policies implemented during this period, we assessed how the onset of the COVID-19 restrictions impacted urban park crime levels in London, England.
We identified crimes that occurred in publicly accessible parks and gardens in the Greater London Authority (England, UK) between March 1, 2019 and February 28, 2021 by overlaying open-access crime data with greenspace data supplied by the Greater Information for Greater London service. Using interrupted time series analyses, we estimated seasonality-adjusted associations between the onset of COVID-19 restrictions and park crimes.
Overall (1565.7, 95% confidence intervals [CI] 1021.9 to 2109.5) and antisocial behaviour crimes (1772.7, 95% CI 823.6-2721.7) increased in London parks during the first full month of COVID-19 restrictions (April 2020). There were no notable trends in park crimes in London prior to the onset of restrictions, but overall and antisocial behaviour crimes decreased after the onset of restrictions at a rate of 156.4 (95% CI -220.25 to -92.51) and 164.7 (95% CI -280.68 to -48.74) crimes/months, respectively.
Overall park crimes increased during the first full month of the COVID-19 restrictions, largely driven by an increase in antisocial behaviours. Additional research is needed to identify the specific misdemeanours that accounted for this rise in antisocial behaviours and to investigate their downstream impacts (e.g. increases in policing costs or decreases in perceived park safety).
由于封锁措施限制了公共场所中能够履行监护职责的人员数量,公园犯罪在新冠疫情期间可能有所增加。尽管如此,封锁措施对公园犯罪的影响仍不明确。为帮助我们了解在此期间实施的政策对社会的影响,我们评估了新冠疫情限制措施的实施对英国伦敦城市公园犯罪水平的影响。
我们通过将开放获取的犯罪数据与大伦敦信息服务提供的绿地数据进行叠加,确定了2019年3月1日至2021年2月28日期间在大伦敦管理局(英国,英格兰)内公众可进入的公园和花园中发生的犯罪。使用中断时间序列分析,我们估计了新冠疫情限制措施的实施与公园犯罪之间经季节性调整后的关联。
在新冠疫情限制措施实施的第一个整月(2020年4月),伦敦公园的总体犯罪(1565.7起,95%置信区间[CI]为1021.9至2109.5起)和反社会行为犯罪(1772.7起,95%CI为823.6 - 2721.7起)有所增加。在限制措施实施之前,伦敦公园犯罪没有明显趋势,但在限制措施实施后,总体犯罪和反社会行为犯罪分别以每月156.4起(95%CI为 - 220.25至 - 92.51起)和164.7起(95%CI为 - 280.68至 - 48.74起)的速度下降。
在新冠疫情限制措施实施的第一个整月,公园总体犯罪有所增加,主要是由反社会行为的增加所驱动。需要进一步研究以确定导致反社会行为增加的具体不当行为,并调查其下游影响(如警务成本增加或公园安全感下降)。