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July 03, 2005

Journal of Experimental Criminology 1(1) and 1(2)

A new journal. Focuses on high quality experimental and quasi-experimental research in the development of evidence based crime and justice policy. The journal is also committed to the advancement of the science of systematic reviews and experimental methods in criminology and criminal justice.

First two issues FREE.



Volume 1, Number 1 (April 2005)


Randomized experiments in criminology: What have we learned in the last two decades? by David P. Farrington and Brandon C. Welsh

Drug and violence prevention: Rediscovering the critical rational dimension of evaluation research by Dennis M. Gorman

Prevention science, drug abuse prevention, and Life Skills Training: Comments on the state of the science by Gilbert J. Botvin and Kenneth W. Griffin

Doing prevention science: A response to Dennis M. Gorman and a brief history of the quasi-experimental study nested within the Seattle Social Development Project by J. David Hawkins and Richard F. Catalano

A randomized experimental study of sharing crime data with citizens: Do maps produce more fear? by Elizabeth R. Groff, Brook Kearley, Heather Fogg, et al.

The effectiveness of treatment for sexual offenders: A comprehensive meta-analysis by Friedrich Lösel and Martin Schmucker

Volume 1, Number 2 (July 2005)

Predicting the effect of substance abuse treatment on probationer recidivism by Pamela K. Lattimore, Christopher P. Krebs, Willem Koetse, et al.

Why do evaluation researchers in crime and justice choose non-experimental methods? by Cynthia Lum and Sue-Ming Yang

Can electronic monitoring reduce crime for moderate to high-risk offenders? by Marc Renzema and Evan Mayo-Wilson

A meta-analytic review of court-mandated batterer intervention programs: Can courts affect abusers’ behavior? by Lynette Feder and David B. Wilson

The centrality of critical rational reasoning in science: A response and further comments on the Life Skills Training program, the Seattle Social Development Project, and prevention studies by Dennis M. Gorman

Posted by Emma at July 3, 2005 07:17 AM

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