RT Article T1 Opportunity, motivation, and assaults on police: A bivariate arima analysis JF American journal of criminal justice VO 19 IS 1 SP 1 OP 19 A1 Chamlin, Mitchell B. A1 Cochran, John K. A2 Cochran, John K. LA English YR 1994 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1764206150 AB Drawing on insights garnered from the routine activity and pluralistic conflict perspectives, the present investigation examines the interrelationships between structural sources of opportunities and motivations to engage in potentially conflictive interactions with police personnel and assaults against the police. Overall, the longitudinal analyses of the reciprocal relationship between total and disaggregated measures of arrest and non-lethal assaults within Oklahoma City, Oklahoma tend to produce weak and insignificant results. The implications of these findings for opportunity theories of crime are discussed. K1 Routine Activity Theory K1 White Noise Process K1 American Sociological Review K1 Routine Activity K1 Cross Correlation Function DO 10.1007/BF02887436