“…However, the surveillance theory by Jacobs (1961), Newman (1973), Skogan (1992), , , Ceccato (2020), Pain et al (2006), Clarke et al (1996), Loukaitou-Sideris et al (2009), La , , Ceccato and Bamzar (2016), and is challenged by the findings of Ramsay (1982), Soomeren (1996), Gentry (2015), Belanger (1999), Burrows (1980), Shellow et al (1975), Loukaitou-Sideris et al (2002, Bhattacharyya (2016), Sypion-Dutkowska and Leitner (2017), Dhillon and Bakaya (2014), Newton et al (2015), Solymosi et al (2015), Boessen and Hipp (2018), Newton (2004), , Crenshaw and John (1989), Talen (1996), and Roy and Bailey (2021), which revealed that the surveillance theory and environmental design including the layout of building plots, lightings, and police stations cannot establish a sense of community through strategies to unite people because the more the people on the streets, the more the opportunities for people to commit crimes. More trash, social chaos, social disorder, and social imbalance in the community also cause crime to occur.…”