A review of Street Lighting Evaluations:
Crime Reduction Effects
1999
(An extract from Crime Prevention
Studies Volume 10, pp. 47-76)
Professor Ken Pease
University of Huddersfield
'Our aim should now be to use context-appropriate lighting
schemes as part of a full repertoire of crime reduction
tactics. ……..The provisions of the British Crime and
Disorder Act 1998 constitute a potential vehicle for lighting
programmes operating within crime reduction schemes generally .'
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Contents
Precisely targeted increases in street lighting generally
have crime reduction effects.
More general increases in street lighting seem to have
crime prevention effects
Even untargeted increases in crime prevention generally
make residents less fearful of crime
In the most recent studies, street lighting improvements
are associated with crime reductions in the daytime as well
as at night
The debate about lighting effects has served to preclude a
more refined analysis of the means by and circumstances in
which lighting might reduce crime.
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