The great crime recovery: Crimes against women during, and after, the COVID-19 lockdown in Mexico
                 
        Academic Article in Scopus
                     
                
        
            
    
    
     
        
    
         
     
    
    -  
- Overview
-  
- Identity
-  
- Additional document info
-  
- View All
-  
Overview
        
            
                    abstract   
                
    - 
    	© 2021 The Author(s)This paper considers whether the COVID-19 stay-at-home order affected crimes targeting women. To answer this question, we use national municipal-level crime data from Mexico's National Public Security System. The NPSS reports sexual crimes, lapses in alimony, domestic violence, and femicides. Using the NPSS, we track monthly changes in crimes targeting women using an event-study design. Our results show that lapses in alimony, sexual crimes, and domestic violence follow a U-shaped trend. Each crime declined during the stay-at-home order, and then rose back to pre-COVID levels by October. Then, we analyze potential mechanisms for the reduction in crimes against women. We find that infection risk, victim-criminal match, and banning the sale of alcohol are related to higher declines in crime. 
    
status   
                
             
            
                    publication date   
                
             
            
                    published in   
                
             
         
         
        
        
            Identity
        
            
                    Digital Object Identifier (DOI)   
                
             
            
                    PubMed ID   
                
             
         
         
        
        
            Additional document info
        
            
                    has global citation frequency   
                
             
            
                    volume