The Impact of Drug Enforcement on Crime: An Investigation of the Opportunity Cost of Police Resources
- 1 October 2001
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Drug Issues
- Vol. 31 (4) , 989-1006
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002204260103100410
Abstract
The conventional wisdom among the law enforcement community is that drug use causes crime and that stringent enforcement of drug laws is an effective tool to combat property and violent crime. Previous research by some of these authors found that a sharp increase in drug enforcement in Florida during 1984–1989 resulted in a reallocation of police resources which reduced the effectiveness of property crime enforcement and increased the property crime rate. Some have suspected that this result is the product of the very large increase in drug enforcement during this time period and that under “normal” circumstances greater drug enforcement would not result in higher property crime. This paper rebuts that suspicion.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- Price-raising drug enforcement and property crime: a dynamic modelJournal of Economics, 2000
- Property Crime and Drug Enforcement in PortugalCriminal Justice Policy Review, 2000
- A Time-Series Analysis of Crime, Deterrence, and Drug Abuse in New York CityAmerican Economic Review, 2000
- Entrepreneurial Police and Drug Enforcement PolicyPublic Choice, 2000
- What Price Data Tell Us about Drug MarketsJournal of Drug Issues, 1998
- Deterrence and Public Policy: Trade-Offs in the Allocation of Police ResourcesInternational Review of Law and Economics, 1998
- Careers in Crack, Drug Use, Drug Distribution, and Nondrug CriminalityCrime & Delinquency, 1995
- Police bureaucracies, their incentives, and the war on drugsPublic Choice, 1995
- Estimating Deterrence Effects: A Public Choice Perspective on the Economics of Crime LiteratureSouthern Economic Journal, 1994
- Is property crime caused by drug use or by drug enforcement policy?Applied Economics, 1992