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Crime prevention, swarm intelligence and stigmergy: understanding the mechanisms of social media-facilitated community crime prevention

journal contribution
posted on 2021-03-01, 00:00 authored by Mark WoodMark Wood, Chrissy Thompson
Social media are now utilized extensively by Neighbourhood Watch-style initiatives; however, the impact social media have on the practices and mechanisms of community crime prevention remains under-theorized. Drawing on our observations of an Australian-based community crime prevention group over two-and-a-half years, this article develops a grounded theory of the mechanisms underpinning the group’s social media-facilitated practices of responding to local crime. We find that social media-facilitated Neighbourhood Watch is shaped by two phenomena that have yet to receive sustained attention in crime prevention research. These are swarm intelligence—a form of self-organization wherein collectives process information to solve problems that members cannot solve individually—and stigmergy: work that stimulates further work. In explaining how swarm intelligence and stigmergy interact with several of the long-acknowledged mechanisms and issues associated with Neighbourhood Watch, we emphasize the importance of examining how the media context of community crime prevention groups shapes their practices, behaviour and (in)efficacy.

History

Journal

The British journal of criminology

Volume

61

Issue

2

Pagination

414 - 433

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Location

Oxford, Eng.

ISSN

0007-0955

eISSN

1464-3529

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal