RT Article T1 The Influence of Vacation Home Rentals on Neighborhood Crime and Disorder JF American journal of criminal justice VO 48 IS 1 SP 233 OP 249 A1 Reinhard, Daniel LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1883306760 AB This study examines the association between vacation home rentals (VHR) and residential burglary, disturbances, and substance crimes from social disorganization and routine activity perspectives. Airbnb and crime data for 2018 in Austin, Texas, were analyzed spatially and with multivariate count regression models. Census block groups were used as the unit of analysis (N = 602). Other variables considered include socio-demographic variables, a spatial lag, and bar and nightclub locations. Negative binomial regression analyses revealed VHR properties to be significantly and negatively associated with residential burglary, substance crimes, and disturbances when the rental was the entire structure; however, VHR properties were associated with all crime types in a significant and positive manner when the rental was only for an individual room in the property. This is the second study to find negative associations between entire structure VHRs and crime, though this study varies from others in several aspects. VHRs do not appear to contribute to crime in all circumstances, and listing type matters. However, this is a newer research topic and future studies would benefit from using longitudinal methods, addressing the temporal order of VHR properties and crime in neighborhoods, as well as considering property management characteristics. K1 Airbnb K1 Crime K1 Neighborhoods K1 Vacation home rentals DO 10.1007/s12103-021-09635-8