Abstract

Crowd-based events, such as football matches, are considered generators of crime. Criminological research on the influence of football matches has consistently uncovered differences in spatial crime patterns, particularly in the areas around stadia. At the same time, social media data mining research on football matches shows a high volume of data created during football events. This study seeks to build on these two research streams by exploring the spatial relationship between crime events and nearby Twitter activity around a football stadium, and estimating the possible influence of tweets for explaining the presence or absence of crime in the area around a football stadium on match days. Aggregated hourly crime data and geotagged tweets for the same area around the stadium are analysed using exploratory and inferential methods. Spatial clustering, spatial statistics, text mining as well as a hurdle negative binomial logistic regression for spatiotemporal explanations are utilized in our analysis. Findings indicate a statistically significant spatial relationship between three crime types (criminal damage, theft and handling, and violence against the person) and tweet patterns, and that such a relationship can be used to explain future incidents of crime.

Highlights

  • IntroductionRecent research has found spatial correlations between crime and sporting events using various approaches

  • The spatial relationship between violent tweets and crime on comparison days is low with bivariate local indicators of spatial association (LISA) values ranging from 0.10 to 0.14

  • Researchers and criminal justice practitioners should be aware of the spatial relationship that exists between geotagged tweets and crimes, which in turn could be useful in finding elements of the urban landscape that may be crime attractors or generators

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Summary

Introduction

Recent research has found spatial correlations between crime and sporting events using various approaches. Literature has consistently demonstrated a relationship between football and hooliganism [1,2], disorderly fan behaviour [3,4], and a change in the count and distribution of crime events on home match days [4]. Positive externalities are highly emphasized by researchers in the framework of sporting events, including economic impact, such as subsequent changes in the stock market [5,6,7], mostly when the team is winning [8]; and the psychological aspect and social benefits [9,10,11].

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