E-Book, Englisch, 368 Seiten
E-Book, Englisch, 368 Seiten
ISBN: 978-1-136-64728-4
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
It provides practitioners and researchers with grounding in the practical techniques appropriate for research in applied forensic settings. This includes knowledge and skills of the research process and the wide range of research methods (both quantitative and qualitative) being applied in this arena. The text provides a critical understanding of the problems, challenges and ethical issues which can arise and ideas for managing these. Specific attention is paid to empirical research within forensic populations and settings including researching vulnerable groups (e.g. offenders and the mentally ill in secure settings), evaluating treatment programmes, and the uses and problems of randomised control trials.
The book is clearly structured, with each methodology chapter describing the background of the approach; the type of research questions addressed; design principles and issues; the types of analysis that can be utilised; strengths and limitations of the method; future directions and further sources of information. Through the inclusion of case studies and illustrative examples from forensic researchers and practitioners who have extensive experience of conducting applied research, this book tackles real-life problems typically faced by researchers and practitioners.
Research in Practice for Forensic Professionals is an essential one-stop resource for practitioners (such as psychologists, nursing and medical staff, prison and probation workers, social workers, occupational therapists) who have an interest in research and in evaluating their own work and the services in which they work. It will also be of interest to students studying areas of applied research, such as forensic psychology or applied criminology and those teaching them.
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Weitere Infos & Material
Part 1: Introduction to Forensic Research 1. Conducting Research in Forensic Settings: Philosophical and Practical Issues, Jason Davies, Kerry Sheldon and Kevin Howells 2. Ethical Problems Arising in Forensic and Correctional Research, Tony Ward and Gwenda Willis Part 2: Risk, Investigative and Criminal Justice Research 3. Risk Research, Michael Doyle 4. Facet Theory and Multi-Dimensional Scaling Methods in Forensic Research, Jennifer Brown 5. Court Relevant Research Methods, Matthew A. Palmer, Ruth Horry, and Neil Brewer Part 3: Approaches at the Qualitative Level 6. Qualitative Research With Staff In Forensic Settings: A Grounded Theory Example, Neil Gordon 7. Using Qualitative Methods to Research Offenders and Forensic Patients, Dennis Howitt Part 4: Assessing Individual Change 8. Single Case Methodologies, Jason Davies and Kerry Sheldon 9. The Idiographic Measurement of Change, Sean Hammond 10. Functional Analysis, Michael Daffern Part 5: Approaches at the Group Level 10. Strengths and Weaknesses of Randomised Control Trials, Clive R. Hollin 11. Evaluation of Regimes and Environments, Matt Tonkin and Kevin Howells 12. Evaluating the quality of criminal justice programmes, Andrew Day 13. Treatment and Rehabilitation Evaluation and Large Scale Outcomes, James McGuire 14. Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analysis, Michael Ferriter 15. Conclusion, Kevin Howells, Kerry Sheldon and Jason Davies