Broken window Policing was first introduced and theorized in the 1982, by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling. Both criminologist surmised, that if police started going after minor crimes it would create a domino effect that would cause a decline in more serious offense and crimes. Although the idea of broken policing originated in Newark it was first implemented in New York City (Childress, 2016, p.2). Soon the policy of broken policing swept the America. Soon cities and municipalities like Los Angeles, Chicago and Boston started to see the effects the new policy had on their cities. Many cities at first believed the policy was working because, after implementing broken window policing cities saw impressive decreases in overall crime rates (Childress, 2016, p.3). However, it is proven that broken window policing wasn’t the factor in the decline of crimes in NYC and the rest of the country. According to several criminologists, police chiefs, and public official’s, new studies suggest that violent crime began to fall around the same time that the crack boom started to wane in the early 1990s. Conveniently around the time that
Broken window Policing was first introduced and theorized in the 1982, by James Q. Wilson and George Kelling. Both criminologist surmised, that if police started going after minor crimes it would create a domino effect that would cause a decline in more serious offense and crimes. Although the idea of broken policing originated in Newark it was first implemented in New York City (Childress, 2016, p.2). Soon the policy of broken policing swept the America. Soon cities and municipalities like Los Angeles, Chicago and Boston started to see the effects the new policy had on their cities. Many cities at first believed the policy was working because, after implementing broken window policing cities saw impressive decreases in overall crime rates (Childress, 2016, p.3). However, it is proven that broken window policing wasn’t the factor in the decline of crimes in NYC and the rest of the country. According to several criminologists, police chiefs, and public official’s, new studies suggest that violent crime began to fall around the same time that the crack boom started to wane in the early 1990s. Conveniently around the time that