Violent Crime Increases During Warmer
Weather, No Matter the Season, Study Finds
By Frank Otto,Drexel
University
“It is important to recognize the implications of these climate change effects for public health, including changes in crime rates,” Schinasi said. “Although these results back up police officers’ anecdotal reports about the relationship between temperature and crime, it’s nice to have data to confirm these reports. Our results might help inform local law enforcement about ways to allocate resources during different seasons and with consideration of the local climate.”
Weather, No Matter the Season, Study Finds
By Frank Otto,
September 25, 2017 -- Among
police officers, there’s a maxim: Being a cop gets a whole lot busier when it’s
hot out. Now, a study by a pair of Drexel
University researchers
appears to back them up.
The research, conducted by Leah
Schinasi, PhD, assistant research professor, and Ghassan
Hamra, PhD, assistant professor, both of Drexel’s Dornsife School
of Public Health, was published
in the Journal of Urban Health and used a decade’s worth of crime
data in Philadelphia (from 2006 until 2015) to find that rates of violent crime
and disorderly conduct increased when daily temperatures are higher.
Overall, crime rates were
highest in the warmest months of the year — May through September — and highest
on the hottest days.
For
example, when the heat index (a metric that uses temperature and humidity to
represent human comfort) was 98 degrees, rates of violent crime were 9 percent
higher compared to days when the temperature was 57 degrees. When it came to
rates of disorderly conduct, they were 7 percent higher on 98-degree days than
on 57-degree days.
During the year’s
colder months — October through April — the contrast of high versus low rates
of crime on more comfortable versus cooler temperature days was more striking.
When temperatures reached 70 degrees during that time period, daily rates of violent
crime were 16 percent higher, on average, and disorderly conduct rates were 23
percent higher, compared to 43 degree days, the median heat index for that
period.
The researchers also looked
at deviations of daily temperatures from seasonal averages in trying to
determine the effect of anomalies on crime rates. For example, during cool
months, days that were 55 degrees warmer than the seasonal average were
associated with 7 percent higher rates of disorderly conduct.
“Our
findings are reasonable when you think about social behavior,” Schinasi said.
“When temperatures are extremely cold or hot, people stay indoors. But as
temperatures become more comfortable, more people are outdoors, which presents
greater opportunity for crime.”
Following that more
pleasant weather results in more crime, it could be assumed that cooler days in
hot weather months would result in more crime.
But that does not seem to be
the case, as crime rates remained fairly static during the hotter-weather
months when temperatures dip below the seasonal average.
“I could speculate about the
reasons that cooler, more comfortable summer temperatures are not associated
with higher rates of crime, but I am honestly not sure,” Schinasi said.
“Overall, these results still reflect that higher rates of crime occur when
temperatures are warmer. Additional analyses that tease apart these effects
will help us to better understand these findings and seasonal trends.”
Schinasi suggested
additional research into the locations of crime and the particulars of the
areas, like infrastructure and neighborhood characteristics, would divulge more
insight.
Regardless, seeing increases
in crime during warmer days is particularly concerning when taking climate
change into account. Schinasi and Hamra’s research is potentially a picture of
what could happen if (or when) warmer days become the norm.“It is important to recognize the implications of these climate change effects for public health, including changes in crime rates,” Schinasi said. “Although these results back up police officers’ anecdotal reports about the relationship between temperature and crime, it’s nice to have data to confirm these reports. Our results might help inform local law enforcement about ways to allocate resources during different seasons and with consideration of the local climate.”
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