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The Hidden Measurement Crisis in Criminology

The Hidden Measurement Crisis in Criminology

The Hidden Measurement Crisis in Criminology

Procedural Justice as a Case Study
Authors:
Amanda Graham, Texas State University
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Bruce G. Link, University of California, Riverside
Published:
March 2025
Availability:
Available
Format:
Paperback
ISBN:
9781009558563

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    The field of criminology is limited by a 'hidden' measurement crisis. It is hidden because scholars either are not aware of the shortcomings of their measures or have implicitly agreed that scales with certain properties merit publication. It is a crisis because the approaches used to construct measures do not employ modern systematic psychometric methods. As a result, the degree to which existing measures have methodological limitations is unknown. The purpose of this Element is to unmask this hidden crisis and provide a case study demonstrating how to build a measure of a prominent criminological construct through modern systematic psychometric methods. Using multiple surveys and item response theory, it develops a ten-item scale of procedural justice in policing. This can be used in primary research and to adjudicate existing measures. The goal is to reveal the nature of the field's measurement crisis and show a strategy for solving it.

    Product details

    March 2025
    Paperback
    9781009558563
    110 pages
    229 × 152 × 6 mm
    0.175kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The measurement crisis in criminology
    • 3. The concept of procedural justice
    • 4. Measuring procedural justice
    • 5. Adjudication of existing measures
    • 6. The future of measurement: criminometrics as a research paradigm
    • References.
    Resources for
    Type
    Supplementary material
    Size: 94.76 KB
    Type: application/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
      Authors
    • Amanda Graham , Texas State University
    • Francis T. Cullen , University of Cincinnati
    • Bruce G. Link , University of California, Riverside