Abstract

Social media posts incorporate real-time information that has, elsewhere, been exploited to predict social trends. This paper considers whether such information can be useful in relation to crime and fear of crime. A large number of tweets were collected from the 18 largest Spanish-speaking countries in Latin America, over a period of 70 days. These tweets are then classified as being crime-related or not and additional information is extracted, including the type of crime and where possible, any geo-location at a city level. From the analysis of collected data, it is established that around 15 out of every 1000 tweets have text related to a crime, or fear of crime. The frequency of tweets related to crime is then compared against the number of murders, the murder rate, or the level of fear of crime as recorded in surveys. Results show that, like mass media, such as newspapers, social media suffer from a strong bias towards violent or sexual crimes. Furthermore, social media messages are not highly correlated with crime. Thus, social media is shown not to be highly useful for detecting trends in crime itself, but what they do demonstrate is rather a reflection of the level of the fear of crime.

Highlights

  • Most of what is shared in social media are not news, nor posts related to public issues, it has become, for some, one of the main sources of political information and news (Gil de Zúñiga et al, 2012)

  • Our results show that crime rarely appears on social media and it is usually mentioned by only a few users

  • Collecting 32 million tweets and classifying them as being related to crime gives a quantification of crime-related topics in social media

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Summary

Introduction

In Latin America, 90% of the active users7 detected during 70 days did not publish anything related to crime or violence, so that only 10% of the accounts post tweets related to crime, varying from 2% in Cuba, 7% in Mexico and up to 20% in Venezuela. Comparing the number of crime-related tweets with the observed levels of crime and fear of crime at country level, let us detect if there is any correlation between crime and what is portrayed on social media.

Results
Conclusion
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