Abstract

A common question among both academicians and practitioners concerns the relationship between the weather and crime. Although early researchers, including Durkheim, introduced climatological factors in their discussions of human behavior and deviance, contemporary criminology tends to ignore these factors as possible contributors to changes in crime despite the ease with which weather variables fit into the routine activities and sociobiological perspectives. The present study investigates the weather-crime relationship, using daily weather figures (e.g. precipitation, humidity, temperature, barometric pressure) and crime data for a large eastern city. The results are discussed in terms of both direct and indirect effects on levels of deviance and the potential usefulness of the analysis for future sociobiological and environmental design approaches to crime control.

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