Chapter 1: Why and how criminology must integrate individuals and environments
· Abstract
· People, places and acts of crime
o The problematic dichotomy of criminology
o Aggregations of crime and acts of crime: The problematic level of explanation
o The problematic dichotomised study of crime events
o Why integrate people and places to explain action?
· Person-environment integration: How?
o The additive and interactive worldviews
o Approaches to criminological research
o Interaction, explanation, prevention
· Summary: Advocating an analytic criminology of person-environment interaction in acts of crime for effective prevention
· References
Chapter 2: Integrating individuals and environments: A Situational approach to studying action
· Abstract
· Lacking an integrative model of action
· Studying dependency
· Integrative models of acts of crime
o Situational Action Theory and the situational model
o ‘Situation’, ‘environment’ and ‘setting’
· Studying convergence: New approach, new methods
o Exposure
o Summary
· Appendix: Clarity of definitions and concepts: ‘situation’, ‘environment’ and ‘setting’
o Conceptual ambiguity in psychology
o Conceptual conflation in criminology
o ‘Situation’ in criminology: Historical context of a misnomer
· References
Chapter 3: Evidencing situational interaction without situation-level exposure data
· Abstract
· Making do without situation-level exposure data
· Interaction (dependence) in regression models
· Solving the problematic distribution of crime
o Non-linear models
o Transformation of the dependent variable
o OLS regression plus safeguards
· Reliability and interpretation
o Significance
o Comparing groups to access meaning
· Conclusion
· References
Chapter 4: Collecting and analysing situation-level exposure data: Clarifying appropriate analysis of the convergence of people in environments to explain action
· Abstract
· Designing situational research
· Collecting situation-level exposure data
o Space-Time Budgets
o Randomised Scenarios
o Future methodological avenues
· Analysing situation-level exposure data
o Additive Analysis
o Situational Analysis
o Evaluating approaches to analysis of situation-level data for appropriate study of situational interaction
· Studying situational interaction: Conclusion and next steps
o Approach
o Data collection
o Data analysis
o Interactionist fundamentalism: Any room for compromise on the interactive approach?
o Coda
· References
Dr. Beth Hardie is a Research Associate at the Institute of Criminology, a member of the Centre for Analytic Criminology, and Research Manager of the Peterborough Adolescent and Young Adult Development Study (PADS+) at the University of Cambridge. Her work is grounded in an analytical approach (guided by Situational Action Theory; SAT) that integrates individually and environmentally focused explanations of human behaviour, including crime. She has a particular and critical interest in the data collection and analytical methodology required for the analysis of situational interaction (the interaction between people and settings) in action.
In response to misconceptions and sub-optimal assessment of situational interaction in the criminological literature, this volume is a comprehensive resource for researchers of person-environment interaction in human behavioural outcomes, with a focus on acts of crime. It provides a bridge between strong complex theory about causal situational interaction in crime and the appropriate methods for empirically testing proposed situational mechanisms. It is underwritten by the principle that research should be driven by theory and served by method.
This volume clarifies the key concepts of interaction and situation within the framework of Situational Action Theory (SAT). It details the implications of these conceptual issues for an appropriate integrative analytical approach to data collection and analysis that places situational interaction at the heart of research into the causes of behaviour (such as acts of crime). Using existing examples of attempts to analyse person-environment interaction, the volume distinguishes and showcases different methods and evaluates their appropriateness for the study of situational interaction in behaviour. Appropriate for researchers in criminology and the behavioural sciences more generally, Studying Situational Interaction is essential for those studying the individual and environmental causes of human actions such as crime.