victimological research yoshiko takashi

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi
The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim
Assistance

VICTIMOLOGICAL
RESEARCH
July 19, 2011
THE 11TH ASIAN POSTGRADUATE COURSE ON VICTIMOLOGY
AND VICTIM ASSISTANCE

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi
California State University, Fresno

Victimological Research


Empirical—Production of knowledge
based on experience or observation





No assumptions or thoughts

Scientific—Scientists have certain criteria
to be met


An assertion must have both logical and
empirical support
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Why Victimological Research?
1. Exploration


Explore the nature or frequency of a
problem or policy




Might also collect data on some measure
to serve as a baseline for later
comparisons



Also appropriate when some type of policy
change is being considered
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Why Victimological Research?
2. Description


Describe the scope of a problem or
policy response



Make more accurate and formal

observations



Develop a preliminary understanding



Following exploration, we want to know
the problem’s
frequency/prevalence/degree
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Why Victimological Research?
3. Explanation


Explain things—answer “Why?”




Why have we seen a certain change
in scope?



Why does a certain problem exist?



Example: Why do victims of domestic
violence not leave the abusive
husband?
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

The Cycle Theory of
Violence
Acute
explosion


Tension
building

Honeymoon
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Why Victimological Research?
4. Application


Applied research is based on a need for
specific facts and findings—with implications
for policy



Two major types of applied research:


Evaluation research—comparing

program goals to results



Policy analysis—prospective; anticipate
future consequences of alternative actions

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Research Methods
Identifying a research problem
Reviewing the literature
Identifying a purpose
and stating questions
Collecting data
Analyzing and interpreting
data
Reporting and evaluating the
study
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance


How to Design a Research Project


Beginning points for a line of research


e.g., interests, ideas, theories, new
programs



Why does something occur?



Why is this how it is?




What about this possible program?



These questions may lead to others you
might like to explore
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Getting Started


Find out what research has been done



Read newspaper stories, journal articles,
check out the Internet, talk to relevant
people




Figure out your objective and intended
audience



Generally, your purpose for undertaking
research can be expressed in a report
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Conceptualization


What do you mean by the concept being studied?



If you are going to study fear of violent crime in
your community






What is considered “violent crime”?



What is considered “fear”?

You need to specify ALL the concepts that you
wish to study

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Choice of Research Method


A variety of methods are available, each
with strengths and weaknesses; choose

one after considering the specific concept
you want to study


Interviews, surveys, field research,
content analysis, official records



The best studies utilize more than one
research method

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Zimbardo Experiment
(1971)






Stanford prison experiment
A study of the psychological effects of
becoming a prisoner or a prison guard
24 undergraduate students played a role
The prison environment was created in
the basement and the experiment
continued for 6 days

Operationalization


Create concrete ways of actually measuring your
concept



Fear and violent crime:


Questionnaire item: “How safe do you feel in
your house, downtown at night, etc.?”



Official records of violent crime incidents in
that neighborhood, downtown, etc.

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Population and Sampling


Exactly who or what will you study?



Population—group (e.g., of people) about whom
we want to be able to draw conclusions



Because it is generally not feasible to study ALL
members of that population, how will you take a
representative sample?



Fear and violent crime: will you include the
elderly? Teenagers and kids? A particular race
or gender?
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Observations


Collect the empirical data



Qualitative







Non-numerical data
Established through observation and interviews
Open-ended questions, Interview data
Text and image analysis

Quantitative



Numerical data
Based on data obtained from measurements,
survey findings and scales
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Application








Utilize the research you’ve conducted
and the conclusions you’ve reached
Make your findings known to others
Develop policy to address your findings
Determine what mistakes were made
that could be corrected in the future
Determine how your research might feed
into future research

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Official Data vs. Survey
Data


Official Data





Crime reported to police
Uniform Crime Report in the United States

Victimization Survey Data




International Crime Victimization Survey
(ICVS)
U.S. National Crime Victimization Survey
Include unreported crime
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Why Victimization Surveys Are
Performed


To describe more precisely the reality of
victimization and victim characteristics






Relationship
Frequency
Severity

Dark Figure


Reported crime minus unreported crime

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Validity and Reliability


Validity


Measurement approximates a true value

Reliability


Consistency of your measurement

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

The baby’s motion
introduces random
errors
Reliability
problem

The scale reads 1.2
pounds too high when
empty, which makes all
measurements
1.2 pounds too high
Validity problem
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Association NOT Causation
• Ice cream consumption and the crime rate are
associated with each other
• Ice cream consumption does not create crime nor
does crime create ice cream consumption

Program Evaluation
Answer the question: Is your
program successful?
 Improve your program
 Discover unintended side
effects
 Provide program
accountability


Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

The Logic of a Well-Designed
Program

Do measures
reflect program
goals?

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Goals







General statements that summarize the
ultimate impact that the social program
is supposed to have on client problems
Example:
You are going to create a shelter
program for abused women.
Goal: Women who complete the
program will have increased their ability
to protect themselves and their children
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Objectives







Fit within the scope of stated goals.
Immediate, practical effects that you
want your services to have on the
problem.
Realistic and attainable
Measurable and specific
Example: 90% of the women who
completed our program will be able to
name four or more safety resources
available to them in their community.

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Linking the Process to Evaluation


Process evaluation
 Are

policies being implemented as
planned?



Impact assessment
 Are

policies/programs achieving their
intended goals?



Often conducted together
Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance

Thank you for your
participation.

Q&A

Dr. Yoshiko Takahashi The 11th Asian Postgraduate Course on Victimology and Victim Assistance