RT Article T1 Crime Rates in a Pandemic: the Largest Criminological Experiment in History JF American journal of criminal justice VO 45 IS 4 SP 525 OP 536 A1 Stickle, Benjamin F. A1 Felson, Marcus A2 Felson, Marcus LA English YR 2020 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/176420770X AB The COVID-19 pandemic of 2020 has impacted the world in ways not seen in generations. Initial evidence suggests one of the effects is crime rates, which appear to have fallen drastically in many communities around the world. We argue that the principal reason for the change is the government ordered stay-at-home orders, which impacted the routine activities of entire populations. Because these orders impacted countries, states, and communities at different times and in different ways, a naturally occurring, quasi-randomized control experiment has unfolded, allowing the testing of criminological theories as never before. Using new and traditional data sources made available as a result of the pandemic criminologists are equipped to study crime in society as never before. We encourage researchers to study specific types of crime, in a temporal fashion (following the stay-at-home orders), and placed-based. The results will reveal not only why, where, when, and to what extent crime changed, but also how to influence future crime reduction. K1 Crime K1 Rational Choice K1 Routine Activities K1 Coronavirus response K1 crime rates K1 Covid-19 DO 10.1007/s12103-020-09546-0