Crime Prevention through Environmental Design (CPTED) and Built Environmental Manifestations in Accra and Kumasi, Ghana
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Macmillan Publishers Ltd.
Abstract
Households in Ghanaian cities have responded to crime by fortifying their
houses, a practice referred to as crime prevention through environmental design (CPTED).
Though little researched in Ghana and Africa in general, this article, based on in-depth
interviews with police officers, city planners and community members as well as a
household survey, reveal that CPTED through target hardening is a widespread practice
across different socio-economic residential neighborhoods of Accra and Kumasi. It was
found that rising crime rates and the fear of crime have led to adoption of target hardening measures such as high walls, metal burglar-proofed windows and doors, security
doors/special door locks and so on, which tend to create ‘security islands’ with limited
impact on community crime incidence. While CPTED has been widely applied in Western
cities to restructure the physical layout of communities to reduce crime through community efforts, there are marked differences in the Ghanaian context. In particular,
households’ responses to crime through target hardening have the tendency in the longterm to weaken social cohesions, with limited impact on community crime levels.Interestingly, the household survey results show relatively low level of community solidarity in
middle and upper-class neighborhoods as measures for fighting crime.
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Journal Article