Measures

From Securipedia
Revision as of 16:35, 30 November 2012 by Albert (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Measures

Measure types

Increasing perceived effort Increasing perceived risk Decreasing anticipated reward Attributing circumstances Other
Target hardening Surveillance (design for) Target removal Controlling disinhibitors Deflecting crime
Access control Reaction force (design for) removal of crime motivator / denying benefits Facilitating compliance Creating awareness / stimulating conscience
Directing flows of people Screening/detection at entrance/exit Rule setting (curfew, forbidden place, etc.)
Removing means Increase punishment Ownership
Maintenance


text below is a placeholder for measures that can be inserted in other pages

against vandalism

[1]

I. Target hardening. This situational crime prevention approach involves the use of devices or materials designed to obstruct the vandal by physical barriers:

  1. Toughened glass (acrylic, polycarbon, etc.)
  2. Latticework or screens to cover windows
  3. Fire-retardant paint
  4. High-impact plastic or steel fixtures
  5. Hardened rubber or plastic swing seats
  6. Concrete or steel picnic tables, benches, bleachers
  7. Trash receptacles bolted to concrete bases
  8. Rough-play-tolerant adventure playgrounds
  9. Original planting of large-diameter trees
  10. Slashproof transit vehicle seats
  11. Steel-framed bus seats
  12. Antigraffiti repellent spray on bus seats
  13. Tamperproof sign hardware and fasteners
  14. Door anchor hinges with nonremovable pins

II. Access control. This approach involves architectural features, mechanical and electronic devices, and related means for maintaining prerogatives over the ability to gain entry:

  1. Key control systems
  2. Locked gates, doors, windows
  3. Electromagnetic doors unopenable from outside
  4. Deadbolt and vertical-bolt locks
  5. Metal door/window shutters
  6. Protective grills over roof access openings
  7. Fenced yards
  8. Vertical metal or small-mesh (unclimbable) fencing
  9. Reduced number of building entrances
  10. Unclimbable trees/bushes planted next to building
  11. Prickly bushes planted next to site to be protected
  12. Sloped windowsills
  13. Elimination of crank and gear window mechanisms
  14. Steeply angled roofs with parapets and ridges
  15. Use of guard dogs
  16. Use of student photo identification
  17. Partitioning off of selected areas during "downtime" hours
  18. High curbs along areas to be protected

III. Deflecting offenders. This is the channeling of potentially criminal or aggressive behavior in more prosocial directions by means of architectural, equipment, and related alterations:

  1. Graffiti boards, mural programs
  2. Schools/studios to give graffiti writers exposure and recognition
  3. Interesting wallpaper, daily newspaper, chalkboard on bathroom wall
  4. Litter bins
  5. Wash fountains and towel dispensers in school hallways
  6. Steering of pathway circulation:
    1. Paving the shortest walk between connecting points
    2. Avoiding sharp changes in direction
    3. Paving natural shortcuts after demonstrated use
    4. Installing or landscaping traffic barriers (e.g., benches, bushes)
  7. "Next step" posters on broken equipment

IV. Controlling facilitators. This is the alteration of the means to criminal or aggressive behavior by making such means less available, less accessible, or less potentially injurious:

  1. Control over sales of spray paint and indelible markers
  2. Removal of debris from construction/demolition sites
  3. Removal of waste paper, rubbish, and other combustibles
  4. Use of tamperproof screws
  5. Placement of permanent signs, building names, and decorative hardware out of reach from ground
  6. Placement of school thermostats, fire alarms, and light switches far

from "hang-out" areas

V. Exit-entry screening. Instead of seeking to exclude potential perpetrators (as in access control), this set of tactics seeks to increase the likelihood of detecting persons who are not in conformity with entry requirements (entry screening) or detecting the attempted removal of objects that should not be removed from protected areas (exit screening):

  1. Closed-circuit TV
  2. Metal detectors
  3. Vibration detectors
  4. Motion detectors
  5. Perimeter alarm system
  6. Library book tags

VI. Formal surveillance. This is surveillance by police, guards, monitors, citizen groups, or other paid or volunteer security personnel:

  1. Police, citizen, senior citizen, tenant, parent patrols
  2. Neighborhood Watch, School Watch, Block Watch, Rail/Bus Watch groups
  3. Provision of on-site living quarters for citizens or security personnel (e.g., "school sitters," "campground hosts")
  4. Informant hotlines (e.g., "rat-on-a-rat program," "secret witness program")
  5. Crime Solvers Anonymous reward program
  6. Mechanical, ultrasonic, infrared, electronic intruder alarm systems
  7. Automatic fire detection systems
  8. After-hours use of school public address system for monitoring

VII. Natural surveillance. This is surveillance provided by employees, home owners, pedestrians, and others going about their regular daily activities:

  1. Community after-school use
  2. Reduced teacher-student ratio
  3. Increased number of employees (e.g., playground supervisors, bus conductors, teachers)
  4. Round-the-clock custodial staffing
  5. Live-in custodian/caretaker
  6. Distribution of faculty/staff offices throughout the school
  7. Assignment of additional faculty/staff members to hall, cafeteria duty
  8. "Youth vacation vigil" student surveillance program
  9. Use of bus/train employees to report vandalism on their routes
  10. Improved exterior and interior lighting
  11. Low trimming of shrubbery and plants

VIII. Target removal. This is the physical removal or enhanced inaccessibility of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Use of graffiti dissuaders
    1. Teflon, plastic laminate, fiberglass, or melamine covering
    2. Rock cement, slanted siding, or deeply grooved surfaces
    3. "Paint-outs" or use of contrasting colors in patterned surfaces
    4. Fast-growing wall vines or shrubbery, or construction of wall barriers
  2. Removal of pay phones from high-loitering areas
  3. Removal of corner bus seats, hidden from driver's view
  4. Removal of outside plant bulbs
  5. Windowless school or other buildings
  6. Omission of ground-level windows
  7. Concealed school door closers
  8. Concealed pipework
  9. Fittings moved out of reach (e.g., from wall to ceiling)
  10. Signs/fixtures made flush with wall or ceiling
  11. Key-controlled light fixtures in public areas
  12. Removal of (or no replanting of) easily damaged trees/bushes

IX. Identifying property. This is the physical identification marking of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Property marking with school district identification
  2. Property marking with business logo
  3. Property marking with identification seals
  4. Property marking with organization stencil
  5. Property marking with individual's Social Security number

X. Removing inducements. This is the physical alteration of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Rapid repair of damaged property
  2. Rapid removal of graffiti
  3. Use of small windowpanes
  4. Elimination of school washroom and toilet stall doors
  5. Elimination of bars over toilet stall doorways
  6. School restroom thermostats kept at 62°F
  7. Removal of gates and fences
  8. Repainting of playground equipment in bright colors
  9. Beautification programs (e.g., landscaping, painting, maintenance)

XL Rule setting. This is the making of explicit prior statements about acceptable and unacceptable behaviors, as well as about penalties for noncompliance:

  1. Model "hate crime" bill
  2. Antivandalism laws
  3. Building design specifications
  4. Building security codes
  5. Parental liability statutes
  6. Prohibition of sale of spray paint and indelible markers
  7. Codes of rights and responsibilities
  8. School rules of student conduct
  9. Rigorous, irregular, no-warning fire drills

XII. Education. These are direct efforts to dissuade potential and actual vandals by informing them about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:

  1. Vandalism education programs
  2. Arson education programs
  3. Vandalism awareness walks
  4. Vandalism case study classroom discussions
  5. Classroom brainstorming on vandalism reduction
  6. Year-round education
  7. Student orientation handbook and meetings
  8. Multicultural sensitivity training
  9. Antivandalism lectures by older students to younger ones
  10. Antivandalism films
  11. Antivandalism games
  12. Antivandalism slide or tape program
  13. Antivandalism brochures
  14. "Ride with pride" antivandalism transit program

XIII. Publicity. These are indirect efforts to inform potential and actual vandals, as well as the general public, about vandalism costs, consequences, and alternatives:

  1. Antivandalism advertising
  2. Antivandalism news releases
  3. Milk carton/grocery bag antivandalism messages
  4. Antivandalism decals on mass transit vehicles
  5. Antivandalism slogan contests
  6. "Sign amnesty" day (a day of no fines or other penalties for those who return stolen signs)
  7. "Help the playground" campaigns
  8. Antivandalism buttons, T-shirts, rulers, bookmarks, posters

XIV. Punishment. These are negative experiences directed to perpetrators consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:

  1. Suspension from school
  2. Monetary fines
  3. Restitution
  4. Student vandalism account
  5. Group billing for residence hall damage

XV. Counseling. These are remedial experiences directed to perpetrators consequent to their vandaiistic behavior:

  1. Student counseling programs
  2. Conflict negotiation skills training
  3. Moral reasoning training
  4. Interpersonal skills training
  5. Aggression replacement training
  6. Behavior modification treatment for arson
    1. Stimulus satiation
    2. Contingency management
    3. Assertion training

XVI. Involvement. These are efforts to increase the sense of involvement with and ownership of potential vandalism targets:

  1. Encouraging students in residence halls to personalize (paint, furnish) their rooms
  2. Permitting students in residence halls to retain same room several semesters
  3. Student participation in school decision making
  4. School administration collaboration with student organizations
  5. School-home collaboration
  6. Hiring of unemployed youths as subway vandalism inspectors
  7. "Adopt-a-station" antivandalism program

XVII. Organizational climate. These are procedures for enhancing the quality of the potential or actual vandal's social/educational/daily living context:

  1. Teacher/staff approval/reward for student prosocial behaviors
  2. Teacher respect toward students
  3. Teacher/parent modeling of respect for others and for property
  4. Regular, visible presence of school principal
  5. Involvement of school principal in community activities
  6. School curriculum revision
  7. Improved student-custodian relationships
  8. Improved school-community relationships
  9. Reorganization of large schools into schools-within-a-school or

house plans

against grafitti

[2]

Reducing Rewards to Offenders
# Response How It Works Works Best If... Considerations
1 Detecting graffiti rapidly and routinely Permits rapid removal …locations are regularly monitored Requires commitment and resources — efforts should not be piecemeal; can involve employees, police, citizens, hotlines, and other means
2 Removing graffiti rapidly Reduces time graffiti is visible, thus thwarting offenders' objective of having graffiti be widely seen …removal is very quick and consistent Removal may be expensive, difficult and/or coercive (e.g., victims, as well as offenders, may be sanctioned)
Increasing the Risk of Detection
3 Increasing natural observation of graffiti-prone locations Increases risk of detection …graffiti occurs in low-visibility places Efforts to improve lighting, reduce shrubbery and improve sight lines are most effective if the area is not isolated for long periods of time
4 Increasing formal observation of graffiti-prone locations Increases risk of detection; information can aid investigations …there are high- risk hot spots Can use undercover personnel, other employees and electronic means; easily available; can be used on transit systems
5 Increasing electronic security Increases risk of detection …offenders are targeting large areas such as transit lots Can be cost effective; information can aid investigations
6 Conducting publicity campaigns Increases risk of detection …information is widely disseminated, and risk of detection increases May contribute to increased graffiti reports and extend deterrent effect
Increasing the Difficulty of Offending
7 Vandal-proofing graffiti-prone locations Increases difficulty of applying graffiti (may also decrease graffiti visibility, reducing motives); some methods facilitate removal …there are chronic graffiti locations Can be expensive if done retroactively; offenders may change their methods or targets; may stimulate and challenge offenders; some measures, such as using grooved, slanted or heavily textured walls, or otherwise unappealing graffiti surfaces, can be very effective; may be unsightly
8 Controlling access to graffiti-prone locations Makes it more difficult to access or vandalize properties …property or operations can support design changes May be expensive, but very effective; may best be incorporated into construction and planning designs; most effective if behavior is also regulated, such as in apartment complexes or transit stations
9 Focusing on chronic offenders Increases risk of detection of prolific graffiti offenders …there is a small group of chronic offenders Requires offender identification and follow-up
Responses With Limited Effectiveness
10 Controlling graffiti tools Makes it more difficult for offenders to get paint or markers …offenders are easily deterred, and merchants comply Difficult to enforce; offenders can seek tools elsewhere; tools are easily accessed, transported and hidden
11 Channeling behavior into more acceptable activities Intended to provide creative outlets …offenders are artistically motivated Graffiti boards and walls can be placed in highly visible locations; they appear to attract little vandalism; they may not attract the target group
12 Providing alternative activities and services Intended to engage and provide supervision to youth ….offenders are jobless, bored or unsupervised Difficult to identify and involve chronic offenders; programs may be expensives
13 Involving youth in developing programs Intended to tap offenders' consciences and create ownership …offenders are not highly invested in the graffiti lifestyle Little deterrent effect for chronic offenders
14 Expanding applicable laws Increases threat of punishment to deter offenders …laws target particular problems Can be time consuming; offenders believe they won't get caught, so they don't worry about punishment
15 Holding parents accountable Involves parents in controlling offenders' behavior ….offenders are juveniles Offenders can often hide behavior from parents; parents may have little control
16 Increasing sanctions for offenders Raises the risks associated with graffiti …combined with investigative enforcement activities Because apprehension of offenders is low, may have little deterrent effect; sanctions should be applied systematically; requires collaboration with prosecutors and judges; can consist of fines, community service or loss of driver's license
17 Applying new technologies Reduces motives, deflects or diverts offenders, or increases detection …the technology fits the problem May be expensive and require substantial adaptation or experimentation
18 Establishing juvenile curfews Increases the risk of detection for certain offenders …graffiti typically occurs late at night, and offenders are juveniles Difficult to enforce
19 Warning offenders Intended to increase fear of detection …detection is increased, and consequences are unpleasant Apprehension of offenders is low; warnings of dire consequences may not be effective

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. http://www.popcenter.org/problems/graffiti/summary/

MAP

<websiteFrame> website=http://securipedia.eu/cool/index.php?concept=Measures width=100% border=0 scroll=auto align=middle </websiteFrame>

<headertabs/>