NCJ Number: 187679
Title: Effects of Casino Gambling on Crime and Quality of
Life in New Casino Jurisdictions, Final Report
Author: Grant Stitt
Sponsor: National Institute of Justice US Dept of Justice
810 Seventh Street NW
Washington, DC 20531
Sale: National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849
Paper Reproduction Sales National Institute of Justice/NCJRS
Box 6000 Department F
Rockville, MD 20849
Date Published: 11/2000
Page Count: 194
Country of Origin: United States
Language: English
Grant Number: 98-IJ-CX-0037
Annotation: This study examined the effects and impact of
casino gambling on eight new casino jurisdictions.
Abstract: This study provides a multi-dimensioned assessment
of the impact of casino gambling in eight new casino jurisdictions,
Alton, Peoria and East Peoria, Illinois; Sioux City, Iowa; St. Joseph,
St. Louis, and St. Louis County, Missouri; and Biloxi, Mississippi.
These locations were chosen because each had recently initiated
casino gambling and law enforcement officials were willing to make
available Part I and Part II crime data for four years before and
four years after the casinos opened. There were three main components
of the research plan. The first component consists of site visits
to each location. A second major component consisted of telephoning
several hundred residents in each community to obtain their opinions
regarding the impact of casinos. The third component consists of
gathering a variety of official data to determine how the communities
changed once casinos were introduced. The findings reported were
two-fold: findings relating official crime statistics to the advent
of casinos, and findings relating to casino presence to community
perceptions and quality of life issues included problem gambling,
suicide, and divorce, bankruptcy, social capital, quality of life,
and community satisfaction. The findings suggest that when casinos
are introduced to a community the impact varies by community. In
three communities, there were many more crimes that significantly
decreased than increased. When studying these eight jurisdictions,
it becomes clear that not all communities experience the same "casino
effect". It was important to understand that the new casinojurisdictions
tended to have one casino. Biloxi, which has a high concentration
of casinos, differed both positively and negatively from the other
communities studied. Since most of the communities had casinos for
less than 10 years, the positive and negative impact may well change
given a greater duration within the communities. The effects of
casinos in a community were seen as quite varied, depending on a
multitude of variables beyond the scope of this research. It was
determined that the simple analyses and broad generalizations of
this research are not sufficient to understand the complexity of
what happens in communities when legalized casino gambling is introduced.
Tables, appendices, references
Thesaurus Term: Casino gambling ; Economic influences ;
Gambling ; Impact prediction
The NIJ Research Review: NCJ Number 187679
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