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Research Methods in Criminology

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Title: Research Methods in Criminology


1
Research Methods in Criminology
  • 1.Assignment 1
  • 2.Research
  • 3.Research methods

2
Why conduct research?
  • Some want to answer practical questions (Will a
    reduction in average class size from 25 to 20
    increase student writing skills?)
  • Others want to make informed decision (Should
    our school introduce extracurricular activities
    to reduce deviant behavior of students?)
  • Still others want to change society (What can be
    done to reduce rape?)
  • Critics of scientific research in criminology
    view it as a detailed elaboration of what any
    person with common sense know

3
Sense and Nonsense about crime (Walker, 1989)
  • Rates of victimization are higher for males than
    females and for younger people
  • In a large proportion of violent crimes, victims
    know their offenders
  • Knowledge of imprisoned criminals indicates that
    most criminals have jobs and very few are welfare
    dependent
  • The residents of smaller cities have higher rates
    for certain crimes assault, personal larceny,
    and residential burglary
  • Females and the elderly fear crime because they
    are the most heavily victimized of all groups
  • Victims of crime seldom know their offenders
  • The typical criminal offender is either
    unemployed or on welfare
  • The larger the city, the greater the likelihood
    its residents will be victims of crime.

4
Demographic characteristics (victims and
offenders, 1976-2002)
Rate per 100,000 population
5
Demographic characteristics (victims and
offenders, 1976-2002)
Rate per 100,000 population
6
Sense and Nonsense about crime (Walker, 1989)
  • Rates of victimization are higher for males than
    females and for younger people
  • In a large proportion of violent crimes, victims
    know their offenders
  • Knowledge of imprisoned criminals indicates that
    most criminals have jobs and very few are welfare
    dependent
  • The residents of smaller cities have higher rates
    for certain crimes assault, personal larceny,
    and residential burglary
  • Females and the elderly fear crime because they
    are the most heavily victimized of all groups
  • Victims of crime seldom know their offenders
  • The typical criminal offender is either
    unemployed or on welfare
  • The larger the city, the greater the likelihood
    its residents will be victims of crime.

7
The Victim-Offender Relationship
  • Three types of relationships are often
    identified
  • Familial (especially spouses and siblings)
  • Acquaintances (including friends, girlfriends,
    boyfriends, neighbors, and coworkers)
  • Strangers

8
UCR data
  • The majority of homicides known to police involve
    acquaintances (57)
  • Relatives (22)
  • Strangers (21)

9
Homicides committed by women
  • Female-perpetrated homicides account for 10-12
    of the overall homicides
  • Who do women kill?
  • The answer is those closest to them, with whom
    they live (intimate partners, or ex-partners and
    family members)
  • Over the period 1995-2001, intimate partners
    accounted for 32 of female-perpetrated homicides

10
Offender characteristics
  • Typical intimate partner killer is one aged b/w
    25 and 40, with below-average level of
    educational attainment, who is likely to
    unemployed and from lower-class background (Mann,
    1996, Goetting, 1987)

11
Method of killing
  • Women usually kill their partner with a knife or
    sharp instrument (78)
  • Poisoning (6.2)
  • Blunt instrument (2.6)
  • Arson (2.2)
  • Shooting (2.0)

12
Weapon use in Murder
  • A firearm (handgun) is used in about two-thirds
    of all homicides (predominantly males)
  • Knives or other cutting instruments
    (predominantly females)
  • Personal weapons (hands, fists, and feet)
  • Blunt objects
  • Strangulation
  • Contrary to media images, poison and explosives
    are rarely used as murder weapons

13
Sense and Nonsense about crime (Walker, 1989)
  • Rates of victimization are higher for males than
    females and for younger people
  • In a large proportion of violent crimes, victims
    know their offenders
  • Knowledge of imprisoned criminals indicates that
    most criminals have jobs and very few are welfare
    dependent
  • The residents of smaller cities have higher rates
    for certain crimes assault, personal larceny,
    and residential burglary
  • Females and the elderly fear crime because they
    are the most heavily victimized of all groups
  • Victims of crime seldom know their offenders
  • The typical criminal offender is either
    unemployed or on welfare
  • The larger the city, the greater the likelihood
    its residents will be victims of crime.

14
Homicide rates
15
The proportion of intimate homicides differs by
type of area
Intimate homicides (spouses, ex-spouses,
boyfriends, and girlfriends) made up a larger
percentage of murders in rural areas than in
suburban or urban areas
16
Research as an attack on common sense
  • Hirshi and Stark (1969) in Hellfire and
    Delinquency have found a weak relationship b/w
    church attendance and nondeliquency
  • damned if you do and damned if you dont
  • Study was attacked as false, stupid, or an
    illustration of inadequate methods
  • Had they found a strong relationship, they would
    have been accused of wasting time on the common
    sense knowledge

17
Research as the use of standardized systematic
procedures in the search of knowledge
  • Pure research
  • for the sake of scientific knowledge
  • Construction of theories of models that allow for
    a better understanding of criminal behavior
  • No immediate direct relevance
  • Applied research
  • Practical goal in mind
  • Development of strategies intended to address the
    problem of crime

18
Purposes of Research
  • Exploration, Description, and Explanation (Earl
    Babbie, 1999)
  • Exploration provides beginning familiarity with a
    topic
  • To satisfy the researchers curiosity
  • To test the feasibility of undertaking a more
    extensive study
  • To develop the methods to be employed in any
    subsequent study

19
Description
  • Describe situation or events
  • U.S. Census, UCR
  • Computation of crime rates for different cities
  • Many qualitative studies aim primarily at
    description

20
Explanation
  • Explain things
  • Reporting why some cities have higher crime rates
    than others involve explanation

21
Quantitative and Qualitative
  • Hypothesis
  • Data are in the form of numbers from precise
    measurement
  • Theory is largely causal and deductive
  • Replication is possible
  • Analysis proceeds by using statistics, tables, or
    charts
  • No hypothesis
  • Data are in the form of words and images from
    documents, observations, and transcripts
  • Theory noncausal and inductive
  • Replication is rare
  • Analysis proceeds by extracting themes or
    generalizations (although numbers are possible)

22
Quantitative and Qualitative
  • Two logical systems
  • Deductive logic-(hypothesis, observations,
    empirical generalizations, theory)
  • Inductive logic (observations, empirical
    generalizations, theory)

23
A model of the Research Process
THEORY
Deduction
Induction
HYPOTHESIS
FINDINGS
Operationalization
Analysis
DATA GATHERING
RESEARCH DESIGN
Measurement
24
Qualitative Research on Diversity
  • Educational system
  • Manners and everyday interactions
  • Friendship and social activity

25
Manners and everyday interactions
  • Americans ask routinely How are you doing but
    they are not interested in how I am doing
  • American smile has a different meaning than
    smile in my culture. Here it is a polite
    greeting, nothing more
  • I feel that people who smile at me are insincere
    because their smile appears suddenly and then
    disappears also suddenly

26
Manners and everyday interactions
  • Americans are obsessed with cleaning of their
    bodies, but they routinely put their feet on a
    chair or even small coffee table.this does not
    go along with hygiene
  • All my Americans friends do not take off their
    shoes at home. It seems to me that they can bring
    a lot of bacteria and viruses into their homes

27
Friendship and social activity
  • If I cook my real national food, no one from my
    department will try itI need to Americanize my
    native food to make it attractive to my American
    class-mates.
  • It is to difficult for us to make American
    friends. Although, Americans are talkative and
    friendly, they are not opened to new
    relationships
  • Usually it takes much more time to establish a
    friendship with Americans than with people of my
    own culture

28
Research Methods in Criminology
  • Experiments
  • Survey research
  • Field research
  • Content analysis
  • Existing data research
  • Comparative research
  • Evaluation research

29
Classic Experiment
  • At least two groups (control and experimental)
  • Randomly assign people to groups
  • Treat the experimental group by manipulation the
    independent variable
  • Observe the effect of the treatment on the
    dependent variable in the experimental group
  • Compare the dependent variable differences in the
    experimental and control groups
  • Control is crucial (to eliminate alternative
    explanations)

30
Experimental research
  • Researchers use deception to control what the
    subjects believe is occurring
  • Researchers intentionally mislead subjects
    through verbal or written instructions
  • It may involve the use of confederates or stooges
    people who pretend to be subjects but who
    actually work for the researcher
  • For realistic deception, researchers may invent
    false treatment and dependent variables to keep
    subjects unaware of true ones (ethical issues)

31
Laud Humphreys Tearoom Trade (1970)
  • Study of impersonal sexual activity between male
    homosexuals
  • Where the average guy go just to get a blow job
    and Who are they
  • Observational research (how men approach each
    other and how they negotiate sex)
  • License plate numbers
  • Health care research

32
Laud Humphreys Tearoom Trade (1970)
  • Middle class
  • High educational level
  • Mostly married with children
  • Only one nonconventional thing about
    them-tearoom for anonymous sex
  • Great scandal (police could demand the names of
    the subjects)

33
The Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment
(1983)
  • Goal was to find the most
  • effective strategy
  • Three groups two with different treatment and
    control
  • Police officers volunteering to take whatever
    action was dictated by a random system
    instruction in an envelope
  • Three different instructions (1) arrest the
    suspect (2) separate or remove the suspect from
    the scene for 8 hours (3) advise and mediate

34
Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment
  • Victims have been interviewed every two weeks for
    the next 6 months, police records have been
    monitored as well
  • Most influential policy experiment
  • Arrest works more effectively in deterring
    domestic violence

35
Experiments in Criminology
  • Not always possible (ethical issues)
  • Long-term study
  • Quasi-experiments or natural experiments
  • Example Effect of the decision to conduct
    crackdown on drinking and driving by a local
    police force (planned interventions)
  • Occasionally, natural events (catastrophe or
    tornadoes) might substitute planned interventions

36
Strengths Weaknesses
  • the only method that allows us to test the causal
    relationships between variables
  • Random assignment of subjects to experimental and
    control groups allows us to test our hypotheses
  • In real life, only rarely one variable actually a
    cause of another one
  • Difficult to test very complex hypotheses
    (difficult to manipulate and control more than
    one or two variables)
  • Ethical issues

37
Survey Research
  • Survey is a series of questions asked of a number
    of people and designed to measure the attitudes,
    beliefs, values, and personality traits
  • Based on sampling

38
Different research designs
Cross Sectional Design 1990 41-50 51-60 61-70 71-8
0
Cohort Study 1990 2000 41-50 41-50 51-60 5
1-60 61-70 61-70 71-80 71-80
Trend Study 1990 2000 41-50 41-50 51-60 51
-60 61-70 61-70 71-80 71-80
Panel Study 1990 2000 41-50 41-50 51-60
51-60 61-70 61-70 71-80 71-80 81
Denotes comparison Denotes same individuals
39
Observation
  • Observation is a research technique in which a
    researcher directly observe the behavior of
    individuals in their usual social environments
  • Observational research is often called field
    research

40
Different strategies
  • Complete Participant researcher goes
    undercover and does not tell people being
    observed that he/she is doing research
  • Complete Observer researcher views things from a
    distance or one-way mirror
  • Participant Observer people know that they
    are observed

41
Strengths Weaknesses
  • Relatively small groups can be observed at once
  • Labor-intensive
  • Can be subjective
  • Hawthorne effect (participation in research can
    influence subjects)
  • Observation of behavior in natural context
  • Get information about those individuals who
    cannot fill out survey or respond orally
    (children)

42
Life history and case studies
  • In-depth analysis of one or a few cases
  • Qualitative research
  • Sutherlands The Professional Thief (1937)
  • Shaw's The Jack-Roller (1930)

43
Unobtrusive Research
  • Unobtrusive methods are strategies for studying
    peoples behavior in ways that do not have an
    impact on the subjects
  • Homicide rate

44
Unobtrusive methods
  • Artifacts (archeologists use)
  • Use of existing statistics
  • Content analysis

45
Strengths Weaknesses
  • We do not need cooperation of people being
    studied
  • Research does not affect the behavior of people
    being studied
  • Study social things only after they have occurred
    and left traces
  • These traces must solid enough to last until can
    be observed
  • If we use secondary data we do not have control
    over the quality of these data

46
Triangulation
  • Every method has both strengths and weaknesses
  • Whenever possible researchers use more than one
    method to obtain data
  • Triangulation methods are combined so that the
    strengths of one method overcome the weakness of
    another method

47
Example of Triangulation
  • Suppose you study the impact of neighborhood
    problems on youth development
  • Census information (unobtrusive) about poverty
    level in neighborhoods
  • Survey among youth and parents
  • Observations
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