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Examples
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I went on a fantastic dawn chorus walk at a campsite called Kelling Heath Holiday Park in Norfolk.
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This was a concept first described in a 1982 issue of The Atlantic Monthly by sociologists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling, which advocated for the strong enforcement of laws against petty crimes and for stiff penalties for criminals.
Adam Clampitt: One Path to Crime Reduction Adam Clampitt 2011
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Quality of Life laws are based on the Broken Windows theory, first popularized in an influential 1982 Atlantic Monthlyarticle written by James Q. Wilson and Edward Kelling.
Paul Boden: The Quality of Whose Life? Part 2 Paul Boden 2010
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Quality of Life laws are based on the Broken Windows theory, first popularized in an influential 1982 Atlantic Monthlyarticle written by James Q. Wilson and Edward Kelling.
Paul Boden: The Quality of Whose Life? Part 2 Paul Boden 2010
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In 1982, two social scientists—George L. Kelling and James Q. Wilson—published an article in the Atlantic in which they argued that a city window left broken is an invitation to further disorder.
Bloomberg's Broken Windows William McGurn 2011
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This was a concept first described in a 1982 issue of The Atlantic Monthly by sociologists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling, which advocated for the strong enforcement of laws against petty crimes and for stiff penalties for criminals.
Adam Clampitt: One Path to Crime Reduction Adam Clampitt 2011
-
This was a concept first described in a 1982 issue of The Atlantic Monthly by sociologists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling, which advocated for the strong enforcement of laws against petty crimes and for stiff penalties for criminals.
Adam Clampitt: One Path to Crime Reduction Adam Clampitt 2011
-
Quality of Life laws are based on the Broken Windows theory, first popularized in an influential 1982 Atlantic Monthlyarticle written by James Q. Wilson and Edward Kelling.
Paul Boden: The Quality of Whose Life? Part 2 Paul Boden 2010
-
This was a concept first described in a 1982 issue of The Atlantic Monthly by sociologists James Q. Wilson and George L. Kelling, which advocated for the strong enforcement of laws against petty crimes and for stiff penalties for criminals.
Adam Clampitt: One Path to Crime Reduction Adam Clampitt 2011
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Jim Kelling Walleye 29 1/4, July 2008 Ontario, Canada
Field & Stream 2009
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