“…Investigations at the scale of individual cities, such as Dallas, TX (Gamble & Hess, ); St. Louis, MO (Mares, ; Mares, ); Philadelphia, PA (Schinasi & Hamra, ); and Tangshan, China (Hu et al, ), have uniformly demonstrated a positive relationship between temperature and violent crime. Still, other studies have produced similar findings at a broader scale, either by examining a conglomeration of data at the city or county level in the United States (Hipp et al, ; Jacob et al, ; Ranson, ), New Zealand (Horrocks & Menclova, ; Williams et al, ), or South Africa (Bruederle et al, ), or by examining annual, nationally aggregated data for the United States (Anderson et al, ; Rotton & Cohn, ), Finland (Tiihonen et al, ), Malaysia (Habibullah, ), England and Wales (Field, ), or multiple countries around the globe (Mares & Moffett, ). A recent meta‐analysis by Hsiang et al () concurred with these findings; variation in relationship strength between different crime types is a common conclusion (e.g., Rotton & Cohn, ), though aggravated and simple assault consistently yield the strongest relationship with temperature.…”