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UK-based terrorists' antecedent behavior: A spatial and temporal analysis
Institution:1. Institute for Transport Studies, University for Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Department of Landscape, Spatial and Infrastructure Sciences, Peter-Jordan-Strasse 82, 1190 Vienna, Austria;2. Planification des transports et mobilité, Autorité regionale de transport métropolitain, 700, rue De La Gauchetière Ouest, bureau 2110, Montréal (Québec) H3B 5M2;1. College of Veterinary Medicine, South China Agricultural University, Guangzhou 510642, China;2. Guangdong Laboratory for Lingnan Modern Agriculture, Guangzhou, 510642, China;3. Key Laboratory of Zoonosis Prevention and Control of Guangdong Province, Guangzhou 510642, China;4. Department of Biotechnology, Lovely Professional University, Punjab, India
Abstract:Background and purposeTerrorism is a real and present danger. The build-up to an attack includes planning, travel, and reconnaissance which necessarily require the offender to move through their environment. Whilst research has examined patterns of terrorist attack locations, with a few exceptions (e.g. Rossmo & Harries, 2011), it has not examined the spatial behavior of the terrorists themselves. In this paper, we investigate whether the spatial mobility patterns of terrorists resemble those of criminals (and the wider population) and if these change in the run up to their attacks.MethodUsing mobile phone data records for the ringleaders of four different UK-based terrorist plots in the months leading up to their attacks, we examine the frequency with which terrorists visit different locations, how far they travel from key anchor points such as their home, the distance between sequential cell-site hits and how their range of movement varies as the planned time to attack approaches.ConclusionsLike the wider population (and criminals), the sample of terrorists examined exhibited predictable patterns of spatial behavior. Most movements were close to their home location or safe house, and they visited a relatively small number of locations most of the time. Disaggregating these patterns over time provided mixed evidence regarding the way in which their spatial activity changed as the time to the planned attack approached. The findings are interpreted in terms of how they inform criminological understanding of the spatial behavior of terrorists, and the implications for law enforcement.
Keywords:Terrorism  Spatial behavior  Routine activity space  Distance-decay
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