About the model
This model depicts crime patterns among the youth population of Bourke, within varying levels of policing expenditure, risk factor, rehabilitation expenditure and soccer club expenditure.
Underlying Assumptions:
- Only the youth
population of Bourke has the tendency to commit crime
- No
further external factors other than those presented have an effect on criminal tendencies
- ‘Risk
Factor’ refers to any factors that increase the likelihood of youths to
commit crime. This may include exposure to domestic abuse, income level, education
level, family background
- No ‘jail
effect’ - jailed youths do not return to town being more
corrupt than before through learning off their cellmates
- Only 2
outcomes of participating in the soccer club: being engaged by the social
activity and deterred from committing crime, or disengaged and become at
risk of committing crime
Constants:
- Criminals
have a 60% chance of getting convicted
- A jail
sentence for convicted criminals is 6 months
- The top 20%
of the most serious offenders get sent to the rehabilitation centre for 3
months, after which they return to town in a better state and less likely to repeat crime
- 1 session of
the soccer club participation is 3 months
- Soccer club
participants have a 10% chance of being disengaged
- Investments
into policing, rehabilitation services and the soccer club are felt immediately
– no time delay
Interesting results:
- A high
number of criminals does not necessarily mean they all end up in jail. A
stimulation with risk factor at maximum (0.2) and policing at minimum (0.01) shows high
numbers of criminals, but they all seem to be in town. When the slider for
policing is adjusted to maximum (0.5), the criminals are moved from town to jail.
Thus, a high investment in policing is needed to detect and detain criminals.
- A generous
investment into the soccer club (>0.35) results in a higher number of actively engaged
and enlightened youths who then return back to town in a better state. This has an effect of
bringing down the number of criminals (implications for long term)
- In an ideal
world, Bourke would invest maximum levels into policing, rehabilitation and the
soccer club, and there would be a minimal risk factor for crime committing tendencies.
A stimulation on these settings reflect few criminals, low jail rates and high engagement
in the soccer club. However with the towns budget constraints, this is not
a feasible solution for the long term.
- Instead, a long
term solution for Bourke (assuming a moderate risk factor of 0.1) is to allocate
some of the policing expenditure (Eg. Down to 0.37) towards maximising community
development services:
- The rehabilitation centre will tame the most serious offenders, making them less likely to commit crime the next time round (Eg. Setting at 1.0)
- The soccer club will distract youths
from crime temptations, as well as nurture a sense of societal inclusion and wellbeing
in the long term (Eg. Setting at 0.4)
A stimulation on these parameters show that criminal rates are moderated, the ratio of youths in jail to town is lowered, and the outcome for the soccer club is very good with majority of participants feeling engaged.