1. | The areas with which offenders are familiar. | A. | Handler |
2. | One who discourages another from committing crime. | B. | Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design (CPTED) |
3. | Any method of ensuring that offenders will be seen. | C. | Electronic Article Surveillance (EAS) |
4. | The reduction of opportunity for people to commit crime. | D. | Access Control |
5. | One who discourages crime by controlling a particular place. | E. | Target Hardening |
6. | The study of crime by examination of the places criminals frequent. | F. | Situational Crime Prevention |
7. | A focus on crime with particular attention to the built environment. | G. | Crime Pattern Theory |
8. | The attachment people have to the areas immediately surrounding them. | H. | Behavior Space |
9. | One or more methods of limiting access to place, such as legitimate users. | I. | Place Manager |
10. | The view that criminals weigh the costs and benefits of violating the law. | J. | Activity Support |
11. | The locations that offenders frequent during the courses of their daily lives. | K. | Defensible Space |
12. | Any of a number of efforts to make it more difficult for criminals to target specific locations. | L. | Rational Offender Perspective |
13. | Theft-prevention devices that are placed on merchandise. Clerks remove them at the time of purchase. | M. | Environmental Criminology |
14. | Functions that assist and enhance interaction between citizens and other legitimate users in the community. | N. | Motivation Reinforcement |
15. | The view that minor breaches of community standards can create and/or lead to various problems, including crime. | O. | Routine Activities Theory |
16. | A theory of crime claiming that crime results when three factors are present: motivated offenders, suitable targets, and an absence of guardians. | P. | Territorial Cognition |
17. | Any of a number of strategies concerned with encouraging residents and users of an area to have positive attitudes about their living and working environment. | Q. | Surveillance (in environmental criminology) |
18. | A concern not just with how the physical characteristics of communities can influence offenders but also with how such characteristics can influence law-abiding residents. | R. | Awareness Space |
19. | Similar to environmental criminology and situational crime prevention, any of a number of efforts designed to reduce opportunities for criminal offending through manipulation of the physical environment. | S. | Incivilities Thesis |