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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Imani Randolph; Raven Simonds; Dalia Sharps; Jamala Wallace; Hannah Joseph; René Ropac; Tiffany Bergin – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2025
Research has documented numerous barriers to recruitment of marginalized individuals, including historic exploitation, distrust, and accessibility. Such challenges are commonly observed among racial minorities, unhoused individuals, and individuals with lower socioeconomic statuses. Public health researchers have led investigations on ways to…
Descriptors: Homeless People, African Americans, Hispanic Americans, Criminology
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Charlie Winter; R. V. Gundur – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
The swift evolution of digital spaces challenges the established norms of ethical research policy. Ineffective ethical review diminishes researchers' ability to conduct cutting-edge and socially sensitive research, institutions' ability to engage at the forefront of technology, and the relationship between researcher and committee. In criminology…
Descriptors: Ethics, Program Validation, Social Sciences, Digital Literacy
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Willms, Nicole; O'Brien-Jenks, Kelly – Teaching Sociology, 2021
This article argues for the incorporation of library instruction into research methods courses to foster information literacy skills important to disciplinary specialization. The evidence in support emerges from a collaborative teaching and assessment project conducted by a research methods instructor and a faculty instructional librarian. The…
Descriptors: Sociology, Criminology, Majors (Students), Library Instruction
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Mahoney, Ian; Kearon, Tony – Research Ethics, 2018
This case study article draws upon experiences of a doctoral student (Mahoney) and supervisor (Kearon) to reflect on the way in which we construct ethical narratives around our research. We seek to draw attention to the manner in which strict adherence to ERB guidelines can be problematic and risks causing more harm than it seeks to mitigate. We…
Descriptors: Student Research, Criminology, Graduate Students, Ethics
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Nodeland, Brooke; Craig, Jessica M.; Meitl, Michele Bisaccia – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2020
Team-based learning (TBL) is a non-traditional method of instruction that utilizes permanent teams working together to solve problems and make decisions. The authors extend the prior TBL criminal justice literature through a detailed explanation of the use of application-focused activities in the classroom. Specifically, application-focused…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Criminology, Teaching Methods, Problem Solving
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Szostak, Rick – Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 2017
This article argues that cross-disciplinary linkages -- that is, relationships among phenomena studied by those in different disciplines -- often serve to destabilize, at least temporarily, systems of stability that are theorized to operate within the sets of phenomena studied within most disciplines. It surveys across disciplines both systems of…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Research Methodology, Reliability, Economics
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Peyrefitte, Magali; Lazar, Gillian – Teaching Sociology, 2018
This teaching note describes the design and implementation of an activity in a 90-minute teaching session that was developed to introduce a diverse cohort of first-year criminology and sociology students to the use of documents as sources of data. This approach was contextualized in real-world research through scaffolded, student-centered tasks…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Centered Learning, Criminology
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Miner-Romanoff, Karen – Qualitative Report, 2012
The critical and interpretive phenomenological approach is underutilized in the study of crime. This commentary describes this approach, guided by the question, "Why are interpretive phenomenological methods appropriate for qualitative research in criminology?" Therefore, the purpose of this paper is to describe a model of the interpretive…
Descriptors: Crime, Qualitative Research, Data Analysis, Phenomenology
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Feilzer, Martina Yvonne – Journal of Mixed Methods Research, 2010
This article explores the practical relevance of pragmatism as a research paradigm through the example of a piece of pragmatic research that not only used both quantitative and qualitative research methods but also exploited the inherent duality of the data analyzed. Thus, the article aims to make the case that pragmatism as a research paradigm…
Descriptors: Research Design, Qualitative Research, Methods Research, Models
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van der Knaap, Leontien M.; Leeuw, Frans L.; Bogaerts, Stefan; Nijssen, Laura T. J. – American Journal of Evaluation, 2008
This article presents an approach to systematic reviews that combines the Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice standards and the realist notion of contexts-mechanisms-outcomes (CMO) configurations. Both approaches have their advantages and drawbacks, and the authors will make a case for combining both approaches to profit from their advantages…
Descriptors: Research Methodology, Evaluation Methods, Criminology, Evaluation Research
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Gartin, Patrick R. – Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 1995
Asserts that several analytical issues in randomized field experiments conducted by criminal justice scholars must be addressed more systematically. Notes that issues related to statistical power and desired sample size remain unresolved. Reviews related literature from the field of medicine to provide insights regarding the dilemmas created by…
Descriptors: Correctional Rehabilitation, Crime, Criminals, Criminology
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Petrosino, Anthony – Evaluation Review, 2003
Introduces the articles of this special issue focusing on randomized field trials in criminology. In spite of the overall lack of randomized field trials in criminology, some agencies and individuals are able to mount an impressive number of field trials, and these articles focus on their experiences. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Farrington, David P. – Evaluation Review, 2003
Discusses advantages of randomized experiments and key issues raised in this special issue. Focuses on growth and decrease in the use of randomized experiments by the California Youth Authority, the U.S. National Institute of Justice, and the British Home Office. Calls for increased recognition of the importance of randomized experiments. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Palmer, Ted; Petrosino, Anthony – Evaluation Review, 2003
Describes the randomized field trials conducted by the California Youth Authority in the 1960s and 1970s and discusses why such rigorous tests were used and why they eventually came to be used less often. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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Shepherd, Jonathan P. – Evaluation Review, 2003
Discusses the contrast between the frequency of randomized clinical trials in the health sciences and the relative famine of such studies in criminology. Attributes this difference to the contexts in which research is done and the difference in the status of situational research in the two disciplines. (SLD)
Descriptors: Criminology, Experiments, Field Studies, Research Design
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