RT Article T1 Bodyswitching and related adaptations in the resale of stolen vehicles JF The British journal of criminology VO 41 IS 4 SP 561 OP 579 A1 Tremblay, Pierre 1951- A2 Talon, Bernard A2 Hurley, Doug LA German YR 2001 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1639651446 AB The paper provides a case study of a sustained crime expansion. The case study is offence-specific (motor vehicles stolen for resale purposes) and restricted to a particular time frame (1974-92) and setting (a Canadian province). How' offenders have collectively designed this crime increase is given a salient analytical status and made to explain why' it occurred in the first place. As suggested by Cornish (1994) crimes can be analysed as behavioural scripts of various complexity, and offending activities as the purposive experimentation and tinkering of such scripts. Our main argument is that multiple innovations or script alterations have been successfully introduced and adopted by a significant mix of motivated and suitable participants, producing over time a cumulative or sustaining effect on yearly output of unrecovered stolen vehicles. In order to document this aggregate learning' process we rely on a subset of police investigations on resale networks K1 Tatentschluss K1 Netzwerk K1 Kraftfahrzeugdiebstahl K1 Straftatbegehung DO 10.1093/bjc/41.4.561