5: Evaluating a research article.
In the study by Corsaro, Brunson and McGarrell (2009), the researchers use mixed-methodology of quantitative hierarchical growth curve models and qualitative interviews to measure whether problem-oriented policing strategies are effective. The researchers hypothesize that pulling levers can be an effective strategy for reducing drug-related crime. The researchers are able to evaluate the program of problem-oriented policing using quantitative models and qualitative interviews to combine data types in their study.
Ethical issues salient to the study were not explicitly identified and thus did not appear to make any impact on the study itself or its directives. However, one ethical principle that appears to be followed in the study is that identified by Llewellyn, Archibald, Clairmont and Crocker (2013): “the inclusion of dignity requires attention and respect for the diversity of ways of being that become clear when one approaches individuals in all their embedded and relational complexity” (p. 299). This ethical principle helps to ensure that no participants are prejudiced against in a study’s work and that bias is reduced.
References
Corsaro, N., Brunson, R. K., & McGarrell, E. F. (2013). Problem-oriented policing and
open-air drug markets: Examining the Rockford pulling levers deterrence strategy. Crime & Delinquency, 59(7), 1085-1107.
Llewellyn, J. J., Archibald, B. P., Clairmont, D., & Crocker, D. (2013). Imagining
success for a restorative approach to justice: Implications for measurement and evaluation. Dalhousie LJ, 36, 281.
5.1 Political and ethical questions.
Political and ethical issues that might be associated with the research I am proposing in my study are the following: As body cameras are typically viewed by the public as a solution to undue force used by police against citizens, this study’s measure of officers’ perceptions could risk upsetting a delicate balance achieved by the local government in terms of how it seeks to pacify community complaints and watchdog groups concerned with issues like police civility, police brutality, and police accountability...
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