The spatial stability of alcohol outlets and crime in post-disaster Christchurch, New Zealand

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Authors

Breetzke, Gregory Dennis
Andresen, Martin A.

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Publisher

Wiley

Abstract

The devastating Canterbury Earthquakes of 2010 and 2011 left an indelible mark on the city of Christchurch. The social and economic upheaval that immediately followed the Earthquakes has, in time, been replaced with a period of rebuild and transformation. In this study we investigate the effects that the Canterbury Earthquakes had on two important and inter-related phenomena in the city: alcohol availability and crime. More specifically, we investigate how alcohol outlets and crime across six different categories changed in magnitude and spatial distribution pre- (end-2009) and post- (end-2014) earthquake. We do this using a variety of geospatial techniques including a relatively new method: the spatial point pattern test which allows for the identification of changes in spatial patterns at the local level. Results indicate that both alcohol outlets and crime have decreased in magnitude since the Canterbury Earthquakes. Using the spatial point pattern test we found statistically significant differences in spatial point patterns for both alcohol outlets and all crime types pre- to post-earthquake. The similarity in the differences of the spatial distributions of alcohol outlets and crime provides a first empirical clue of their potential association in the city post-earthquake.

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Keywords

Alcohol outlets, Crime, Earthquake, New Zealand, Spatial point pattern test

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Citation

Breetzke, G.D. & Andresen, M.A. 2018, 'The spatial stability of alcohol outlets and crime in post-disaster Christchurch, New Zealand', New Zealand Geographer, vol. 74, no. 1, pp. 36-47.