Abstract

Due to the fact that crime cannot be isolated from the crime scene, a spatial perspective and interest in crime studies have exploded. Consequently, human geography has arisen as a discipline of study dedicated to discovering and assessing patterns in the distribution of human-made phenomena throughout the surface of the world. For decades, experts have examined criminology and human geography to better comprehend the spatial distribution of crime. The question of how gendered geographies of fear, particularly those of females, contribute to the spatial construction of identities in the Asian context has been examined in this paper after identifying nature's existing knowledge pool via bibliometric analysis, based on the Scopus data available related to the field from 2000 to 2020.

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