Difference between revisions of "Security issue: Vandalism"

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* As is true for all forms of aggression,the single best predictor of future vandalistic behavior is similar past behavior
 
* As is true for all forms of aggression,the single best predictor of future vandalistic behavior is similar past behavior
 
(Tygert, 1988).
 
(Tygert, 1988).
  +
* presence of young adults / adolescents
* School, bus stops, ...(?)
 
  +
* presence of likely targets :
 
  +
** easy to break (windows, bus stops)
  +
** deteriorated
  +
** no apparent owner
  +
** no apparent surveillance
   
 
== Impacts ==
 
== Impacts ==

Revision as of 14:21, 16 August 2012


Security issue: Vandalism

Vandalism is the act of willful or malicious destruction, injury, disfigurement, or defacement of property without the consent of the owner or person having custody or control. By this definition, this category includes defacement, such as grafitti. However, in order to keep this security issue limited and surveyable, this act is defined as a seperate security issue. Also, wilful destruction performed by an organised group for a shared reason is excluded from this security issue. This is dealt with in the security issue 'destruction by riots'.In the sense we use the term here, it will therefore only include physical damages and not defacement done without rational reasons.

Description

  • loners or groups
    • footbal hooligans / groups of uitgaanspubliek
    • bored individuals
  • young people

Viewing vandalism causation asessentially an in-the-person phenomenon, Cohen (1971) offers acquisitive, tactical, ideological, vindictive, play, and malicious subtypes. In full contrast, holding that vandalism "resides" not in persons but in the nature of buildings, school or park equipment, or other public facilities, Weinmayer (1969) categorizes the following vandalism subtypes: overuse, conflict, curiosity, leverage, deleterious, irresistible temptation, and "no-other-way-to-do-it" vandalism.

Attributing circumstances

  • alcohol
  • exitement
  • sense of 'owning'
  • social circumstances
  • As is true for all forms of aggression,the single best predictor of future vandalistic behavior is similar past behavior

(Tygert, 1988).

  • presence of young adults / adolescents
  • presence of likely targets :
    • easy to break (windows, bus stops)
    • deteriorated
    • no apparent owner
    • no apparent surveillance

Impacts

  • Social
  • Perceived security
  • Economic / financial

Measures

  • Change views of youngsters (In their view, public property in a real sense belongs to no one.In contrast, for youngsters less prone to vandalism, such property belongs to everyone; this view reflects their greater sense of themselves as part of a larger community ("Vandals," 1978))
  • characterized by better aesthetic quality and maintenanceof school property;[1]
  • located in more densely populated areas with higher activity levels;
  • furnished a less obstructed view of school property to surrounding residents; and
  • were located in better-illuminated neighborhood areas.
  • prison - approach (such as target hardening, access controlling, offender deflecting, entry-exit screening, surveillance increasing, inducement removing) (! consequences !)[2]
  • de-opportunizing vandalism[3]
  • Surveillance
  • Intervention

Footnotes and references

  1. (School-related vandalism) Reprinted with permission of The Guilford Press CHAPTER 14 Controlling Vandalism: The Person-Environment Duet ARNOLD P. GOLDSTEIN
  2. Furthermore, the very scope of their implementation—in their most extreme form, the "Bastille response" (Ward, 1973) or the "crimeproof fortress" (Zweig &c Ducey, 1978)—has in some settings had a very negative impact on the very mission for which the setting was created in the first place. For example, "More and more high schools are becoming mechanical systems ruled by constraints on timing, location, and behavior. The similarity between schools and jails is becoming ever more pronounced" (Csikszentmihalyi & Larsen, 1978, p. 25).
  3. Weinmayer's (1969) assertion that "ninety percent of what is labeled vandalism can be prevented through design" (p. 286) Wiesenthal (1990), for example, observes that "property damage can be avoided by design elements that do more than resist attack; design can be used to subtly steer the user away from destruction or defacement" (p. 289). Wise (1982) suggests that design may be employed to channel attention away from potentially damaging activities, to reduce the effects of natural processes (e.g., erosion, weathering) that vandals may augment, and to eliminate or reduce the type of environmental feedback that may serve to reinforce vandalistic behavior. Wilson (1977), writing as an architect, summarizes the case fordesign-as-intervention succinctly: The shape of buildings can dictate patterns of use and the circulation of people around them and hence help to structure the networks of social relationships that develop. In addition, buildings, by the amount of surveillance they afford, may prevent or offer opportunities for certain activities to take place unobserved. Finally, attrition and damage to buildings can be prevented to an extent by careful use of materials and finishes. It is eminently sensible to suppose that there is some connection between design and behavior, including vandalism, (p. 795) Blauvelt (1980) urges making the school "occupied."He claims: The key to controlling vandalism is to make the school a place that in some sense is continuously occupied by some form of human or mechanical resence, which will deter or respond to the vandal. The heart of any effective approach to controlling vandalism will be establishing that sense of "presence" which defines the building as no longer being an inert target, (p. 4) Added bus conductors, real and dummy TV cameras in stores, Neighborhood Watch programs, improved neighborhood lighting, and increased number of store employees are all examples of opportunity-reducing, surveillance increasing social-ecological interventions.

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