Chapter 1: Science, Society, and Research
Chapter 2: The Process and Problems of Research
Chapter 3: Ethical Guidelines for Research
Chapter 4: Conceptualization and Measurement
Chapter 5: Sampling
Chapter 6: Causation and Research Design
Chapter 7: Experimental Designs
Chapter 8: Survey Research
Chapter 9: Qualitative Methods: Observing, Participating, and
Listening
Chapter 10: Analyzing Content: Research Using Secondary,
Historical, and Comparative Data, Content Analysis, and Visual
Criminology
Chapter 11: Social Network Analysis Crime Mapping, and Big Data
Chapter 12: Evaluation and Policy Analysis
Chapter 13: Mixing and Comparing Methods
Chapter 14: Analyzing Quantitative Data
Chapter 15: Analyzing Qualitative Data
Chapter 16: Summarizing and Reporting Research
Ronet D. Bachman, PhD, worked as a statistician at the Bureau of
Justice Statistics, U.S.
Department of Justice, before going back to an academic career; she
is now a professor in the
Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at the University of
Delaware. She is coauthor
of Statistical Methods for Criminology and Criminal Justice and
coeditor of Explaining Criminals
and Crime: Essays in Contemporary Criminal Theory. In addition, she
is the author of Death and
Violence on the Reservation and coauthor of Stress, Culture, and
Aggression; Murder American
Style; and Violence: The Enduring Problem, along with numerous
articles and papers that examine
the epidemiology and etiology of violence, with particular emphasis
on women, the elderly,
and minority populations as well as research examining desistance
from crime. Her most recent
federally funded research was a mixed-methods study that examined
the long-term desistance
trajectories of criminal justice involved drug-involved individuals
who have been followed with
both quantitative and interview data for nearly thirty years. Her
current state-funded research is
assessing the needs of violent crime victims, especially those
whose voices are rarely heard such
as loved ones of homicide victims.
Russell K. Schutt, PhD, is professor emeritus of sociology at the
University of Massachusetts Boston, where he received the 2007
Chancellor’s Award for Distinguished Service and taught from 1979
to 2022. He is also a Clinical Research Scientist I at Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center and a Lecturer (part-time) in the
Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School. He completed his
BA, MA, and PhD degrees at the University of Illinois at Chicago
and was a postdoctoral fellow in the Sociology of Social Control
Training Program at Yale University (where he met Dan). In addition
to ten editions of Investigating the Social World: The Process and
Practice of Research and one of Understanding the Social World, as
well as coauthored versions for the fields of social work, criminal
justice, psychology, and education, his other books include
Homelessness, Housing, and Mental Illness (2011), Social
Neuroscience: Brain, Mind, and Society (coedited, 2015), and
Organization in a Changing Environment (1986). He has authored and
coauthored more than 65 peer reviewed journal articles, as well as
book chapters and research reports on homelessness, mental health,
organizations, law, and teaching research methods. His currently a
Dual Principal Investigator (with Matcheri Keshavan, MD) in
randomized comparative effectiveness trial of two socially-oriented
interventions to improve community functioning among persons
diagnosed with serious mental illness, funded by the
Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI). His other
recently concluded research includes co-principal investigator on a
National Science Foundation-funded study of the social impact of
the pandemic in Boston, and co-investigator on a Veterans Health
Administration-funded study of peer support. His earlier
research has been funded by the National Cancer Institute, the
Veterans Health Administration, the National Institute of Mental
Health, the Fetzer Institute, and state agencies. Details are
available at https://blogs.umb.edu/russellkschutt/.
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