Authors: Samuel Langton, Stijn Ruiter, Tim Verlaan
Abstract: Obtained from OpenAlex
This paper describes the scale and composition of emergency demand for police services in Detroit, United States. The contribution is made in replication and extension of analyses reported elsewhere in the United States. Findings indicate that police spend a considerable proportion of time performing a social service function. Just 51% of the total deployed time responding to 911 calls is consumed by crime incidents. The remainder is spent on quality of life (16%), traffic (15%), health (7%), community (5%), and proactive (4%) duties. A small number of incidents consume a disproportionately large amount of police officer time. Emergency demand is concentrated in time and space, and can differ between types of demand. The findings further highlight the potential implications of radically reforming police forces in the United States. The data and code used here are openly available for reproduction, reuse, and scrutiny.
Certificate identifier: 2024-020
Codechecker names: Joey Tang, Max Reichert, Flora Zhou, Eduard Klapwijk
Time of codecheck: 2024-11-28 14:00:00
Repository: https://github.com/codecheckers/codecheck_LangtonRuiterVerlaan2022
Codecheck report: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.14278912
Summary:
Downloaded the data and ran the necessary R scripts to generate the figures.
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