, Director of the Lee Center of Criminology
and of the Fels Institute of Government, University of Pennsylvania (and Adjunct
Professor at ANU), has been closely involved with the Centre's program of
empirical research over several years in his capacity as Principal Investigator
of the Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE).
He is also the co-director with Dr Heather Strang of a series of Home Office funded projects developing and testing the impact of restorative justice programs at various points in the criminal justice system.
Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon Welsh and Doris MacKenzie, eds., Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. London: Routledge, 2002.
Lawrence W. Sherman, et al. 1997. Preventing Crime: What Works, What Doesn't, What's Promising. Report to the U.S. Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Dept. of Justice, 655 pp.
Lawrence W. Sherman, Policing Domestic Violence: Experiments and Dilemmas. N.Y.: Free Press, 1992. (Winner of 1993-94 Distinguished Scholarship Award, American Sociological Association, Section on Crime, Law and Deviance).
Lawrence W. Sherman and Douglas A. Smith, "Crime, Punishment and Stake in Conformity: Legal and Informal Control of Domestic Violence." Am. Sociological Review, 57(5): 680-690 (1992).
Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk, "The Specific Deterrent Effects of Arrest for Domestic Assault." Am. Sociological Review, 49(2): 261-272 (l984).
Lawrence W. Sherman, Patrick R. Gartin, and Michael E. Buerger, "Hot Spots of Predatory Crime: Routine Activities and the Criminology of Place." Criminology 27: 27-55 (1989).
Lawrence W. Sherman, Scandal and Reform: Controlling Police Corruption. Berkeley:
University of California Press (l978) 304 pp.
1:71-100 (l980). [Cited by U. S. Supreme Court in Tennessee v. Garner, l985]
Over $20 million in support from the UK Home Office, Australian federal agencies, and U.S. funders: National Institute of Mental Health, National Science Foundation, National Institute of Justice, Ford Foundation, National Endowment for the Humanities, Smith Richardson Foundation, McKnight Foundation, Dayton-Hudson Corp., Maryland Governor's Office of Crime Control and Prevention, Commonwalth of Pennsylvania, Police Departments of Minneapolis, Milwaukee, Kansas City (MO), Indianapolis, Prince George's County (MD), Honeywell, General Mills, and Jerry Lee Foundations.
SELECTED SERVICE ACTIVITIES
National Academy of Sciences/ National Research Council: Member, Panel on Policing Research, 2000-2002; Ad Hoc Committee on the Future of Justice Department Research, l982; Working Group for Conference on Communities and Crime, l987-88; panel report reviewer, 1997.
PUBLICATIONS
A. Authored and Co-Authored Books
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1978 Scandal and Reform: Controlling Police Corruption. Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 304 plus xii pp. · Pp. 3-15 reprinted in M. David Ermann and Richard J. Lundman, Eds., Corporate and Governmental Deviance: Problems of Organizational Behavior in Contemporary Society (2d Ed.). New York: Oxford University Press, 1982, pp. 52-63. Third Edition, 1987, pp. 52-63.
· Pp. 59-91 reprinted in Arnold J. Heidenheimer, editor, Political Corruption (Revised Edition), pp. 87-911. New Brunswick, N.J.: Transaction, 1989.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman and the National Advisory Commission on Higher Education for Police Officers
1978 The Quality of Police Education: A Critical Review with Recommendations for Improving Programs in Higher Education. San Francisco, California: Jossey-Bass, Inc., Publishers, 302 pp. · Sections reprinted in Mark R. Pogrebin and Robert M. Regoli, eds., Police Administrative Issues: Management Concerns. Port Washington, N.Y.: Associated Faculty Press, l982.
3. Lawrence W. Sherman (with Janell D. Schmidt and Dennis P. Rogan)
1992 Policing Domestic Violence: Experiments and Dilemmas. N.Y.: The Free Press, 443 plus xvi pp. Winner of 1993-94 Distinguished Scholarship Award, American Sociological Association, Section on Crime, Law and Deviance. · Sections Reprinted in Albert P. Cardarelli, ed., Violence Among Intimate Partners: Patterns, Causes and Effects. N.Y.: MacMillan.
4. Committee to Review Research on Police Policy and Practices,National Research Council. Wesley Skogan and Kathleen Frydl, editors.
2003. Fairness and Effectiveness in Policing: The Evidence. Washington, D.C.: National
Academies Press.
B. Edited Volumes
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974 Police Corruption: A Sociological Perspective. New York: Anchor Books/Doubleday Publishers, 347 pp.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 Police and Violence, Volume 452, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (November).
3. Lawrence W. Sherman
1992 Experiments in Arrest for Domestic Violence, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology
4. Brandon C. Welsh, David P. Farrington and Lawrence W. Sherman, eds.
2000. Costs and Benefits of Preventing Crime. Boulder: Westview.
5. Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon Welsh, and Doris MacKenzie (eds.).
2002. Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. London: Routledge.
6. Lawrence W. Sherman
2003. Misleading Evidence and Evidence-Led Policy: Making Social Science More Experimental. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 589 (September).
C. Articles and Comments in Peer-Reviewed, Law and Government Journals
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974 "The Sociology and the Social Reform of the American Police: 1950-73," Journal of Police Science and Administration 2 (September) 3:255-263. · Reprinted: Pp. 110-121 in Alvin W. Cohn and Emilio Viano, Eds., Police Community Relations: Images, Roles, Realities. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: J.B. Lippincott (1976).
· Pp. 237-243 in Arthur Neiderhoffer and Abraham S. Blumberg, Eds., the Ambivalent Force: Perspectives on the Police, Second Edition, Hinsdale, Illinois: The Dryden Press (1976).
· Eric H. Monkkonen, Ed., Crime & Justice in American History, Vol. 5: Policing and Crime Control. Westport, CT.: Meckler.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974. "Uses of the Masters: Weber, Marx, and Durkheim," The American Sociologist 9 (November) 4:176-181.
3. Lawrence W. Sherman
1975 "Middle Management and Police Democratization: A Reply to John E. Angell," Criminology 12 (February) 4:363-377.
· Reprinted: Pp. 87-93 in Public Safety Research Institute, Full-Service Neighborhood Team Policing: Planning for Implementation. Washington, D.C.: National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice (1974).
· Pp. 431-441 in Jim Munro, Ed., Classes, Conflict and Control: Studies in Criminal Justice Management. Cincinnati, Ohio: Anderson Publishing Co. (1976).
· Pp. 119-130 in Larry K. Gaines and Truett Ricks, Managing the Police Organization: A Book of Readings. St. Paul, Minnesota: West Publishing Co. (1978).
· in Mark Pogrebin, Ed., Police Administrative Issues. Durham, North Carolina: Moore Publishing Co. (1981).
4. Lawrence W. Sherman and Maureen McLeod
1979 "Faculty Characteristics and Course Content in College Programs for Police," Journal of Criminal Justice 7, 3:57-75.
5. Lawrence W. Sherman and Robert Langworthy
1979 "Measuring Homicide by Police Officers," Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 70, 4:546-560.
· Reprinted at pp. 12-41 in James J. Fyfe, Ed., Readings in Police Use of Deadly Force. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation (1982).
6. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 "Causes of Police Behavior: The Current State of Quantitative Research, " Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 17, 1:69-100.
· Reprinted in Abraham Blumberg and Arthur Neiderhoffer, Eds., The Ambivalent Force: Perspectives on the Police, Third Edition, Chicago: Holt, Rinehart and Winston (1984)
· Reprinted in Robert Reiner, ed., POLICING, VOL. II: Controlling the Controllers: Police Discretion and Accountability, pp. 99-130. Aldershot, UK: Dartmouth Publishing, 1996.
7. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 “Execution Without Trial: Police Homicide and the Constitution," Vanderbilt Law Review 33, 1:71-100.
· Reprinted at pp. 88-127 in James J. Fyfe, Ed., Deadly Force and the Police. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation (l982).
· Pp. 188-221 in Thomas Barker and David L. Carter, eds., Police Deviance. Cincinnati, Oh.: Anderson, 1986. Cited by U. S. Supreme Court in Tennessee V. Garner, l985.
8. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 "Three Models of Organizational Corruption in Agencies of Social Control," Social Problems, 27,4:478-491.
· Reprinted in W. Clinton Terry, Ed., Policing Society: An Occupational
View. New York, New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc., 1983.
· Reprinted in Delos H. Kelly, Ed., Deviant Behavior: Readings in the
Sociology of Deviance. New York, New York: St. Martins Press, 1984.
9. Lawrence W. Sherman and Mark Blumberg
1981 "Higher Education and Police Use of Deadly Force," Journal of Criminal Justice. Pp. 317-331.
10. Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk
1984 "The Specific Deterrent Effects of Arrest for Domestic Assault" American Sociological Review, 49(2): 261-271.
· Reprinted: Linda Aiken and Barbara Kehrer, eds., Evaluation Studies Review Annual, Volume l0, l985. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publishing.
· Pp. l-11 in Journal of Probation and Parole, No. l6, Fall 1984/85.
· Pp. 262-271 in Neal Alan Weiner, Margaret A. Zahn, and Rita J. Sagi,
eds., Violence: Patterns, Causes and Public Policy. N.Y.: Harcourt, Brace Jovanovich, 1989.
· Investigating the Social World: The Process and Practice of Research, 4/e Authored/Edited by: Russell K. Schutt. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press, 2003.
11. Lawrence W. Sherman
1984 "Experiments in Police Discretion: Scientific Boon or Dangerous Knowledge?" pp.6l-8l in Law and Contemporary Problems Volume 47, Number 4, Fall.
12. Susan E. Martin and Lawrence W. Sherman
1986 "Selective Apprehension: A Police Strategy For Repeat Offenders,"
Criminology Volume 24, Number 1 (February):155-173.
13. Susan E. Martin and Lawrence W. Sherman
1986 "Catching Career Criminals: Proactive Policing and Selective Apprehension", Justice Quarterly, Volume 3, No. 2: 171-192.
14. Lawrence W. Sherman
l986 "Policing Communities: What Works?" pp. 343-386 in Albert J. Reiss, Jr. and Michael Tonry, eds., Communities and Crime. Volume 8, Crime and Justice. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
15. Lawrence W. Sherman
1987 "Reinventing Probable Cause: Target Selection in Proactive Investigations" Journal of Social Issues, Volume 43, No. 3, pp. 87-94.
16. Lawrence W. Sherman
1988 "Randomized Experiments in Criminal Sanctions" New Directions in Program Evaluation, Number 37, pp. 85-98 [San Francisco: Jossey-Bass]
17. Richard A. Berk and Lawrence W. Sherman
1988 “Police Responses to Family Violence Incidents: An Analysis of an Experimental Design With Incomplete Randomization" Journal of the American Statistical Association. March Vol. 83 (401): 70-76.
18. Richard A. Berk, Gordon K. Smyth, and Lawrence W. Sherman
1988 "When Random Assignment Fails: Some lessons From the Minneapolis Spouse Abuse Experiment" Journal of Quantitative Criminology 4 (3): 209-223.
19. Lawrence W. Sherman and Ellen G. Cohn
1989 "The Impact of Research on Legal Policy: The Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment" Law and Society Review, Vol. 23, No. 1, 117-144.
· Reprinted: Douglas J. Besharov, ed., Family Violence: Research and Public Policy Issues, pp. 205-227. Washington, D.C.: AEI Press.
20. Lawrence W. Sherman, Patrick R. Gartin, and Michael E. Buerger
1989 "Hot Spots of Predatory Crime: Routine Activities and the Criminology of Place." Criminology, Vol. 27, No. 1, 27-55.
· Reprinted: Ken Pease, ed. Uses and Abuses of Criminal Statistics. Brookfield VT: Ashgate, 1998.
21. Lawrence W. Sherman, Leslie Steele, Deborah Laufersweiler, Nancy Hoffer and Sherry A. Julian
1989 "Stray Bullets and `Mushrooms': Random Shootings of Bystanders in Four Cities, 1977-88" Journal of Quantitative Criminology, Vol. 5, (4) 297-316.
· Reprinted as Crime Control Report # 7, Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute.
22. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989 "Crime and Security in a Large Hotel: A Case Study" Security Journal, 1(1): 40-46.
23. Lawrence W. Sherman
1990 "Police Crackdowns: Initial and Residual Deterrence" in Michael Tonry and Norval Morris, eds., Crime and Justice: an Annual Review of Research, Volume 12, pp. 1-48. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
· Reprinted in Carl Klockars and Stephen D. Mastrofski, eds., THINKING
ABOUT POLICE, pp. 188-211. NY: McGraw-Hill, 1991.
· pp. 115-120 in Chris W. Eskridge, ed., Criminal Justice: Concepts and Issues.
24. Lawrence W. Sherman, Janell D. Schmidt, Dennis P. Rogan, Patrick R. Gartin, Ellen G. Cohn, Dean J. Collins and Anthony R. Bacich
1991 "From Initial Deterrence to Long-Term Escalation: Short-Custody Arrest for Poverty Ghetto Domestic Violence." Criminology, Vol. 29, Number 4, pp. 1101-1130.
25.. Lawrence W. Sherman
1992 "Attacking Crime: Police and Crime Control." in Norval Morris and Michael Tonry, eds., Modern Policing: Crime and Justice, Vol. 15, pp. 159-230. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
· Reprinted in Robert Reiner, ed., POLICING, VOL. I: Cops, Crime and Control: Analysing the Police Function, pp. 309-380. Aldershot, UK: Dartmouth Publishing, 1996.
26. Lawrence W. Sherman and Douglas A. Smith (with Janell D. Schmidt and Dennis P. Rogan).
1992 "Crime, Punishment and Stake in Conformity: Legal and Informal Control of
Domestic Violence." American Sociological Review 57 (5): 680-690.
27. Lawrence W. Sherman
1992 "The Influence of Criminology on Criminal Law: Evaluating Arrests for Misdemeanor Domestic Violence." Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 83 (1), pp 1-45.
· Reprinted: Richard C. Monk, ed., Taking Sides: Clashing Views on Controversial Issues in Crime and Criminology, 3d ed. Guilford, CT: Dushkin Publishing, 1993.
28. Lawrence W. Sherman, Janell D. Schmidt, Dennis P. Rogan, Patrick R. Gartin, Ellen G. Cohn, Dean J. Collins and Anthony R. Bacich
1992 "The Variable Effects of Arrest on Criminal Careers: The Milwaukee Domestic Violence Experiment." Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, Vol. 83 (1), pp. 137-169.
29. Janell D. Schmidt and Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Does Arrest Deter Domestic Violence?" American Behavioral Scientist, 36 (5).
30. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Dirty Hands and Social Science." Journal of Research in Crime and
Delinquency 30 (3): 362-364.
31. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Defiance, Deterrence and Irrelevance: A Theory of the Criminal Sanction." Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency 30: 445-473.
32. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Implications of a Failure to Read the Literature" American Sociological Review 58: 888-889.
33. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Criminology and Criminalization: Defiance and the Science of the Criminal Sanction." International Annals of Criminology 31: 79-93.
· Reprinted: Revue Internationale de Criminologie et de Police Technique,47: 7-21 (1994).
· Reprinted: Valogatas a 11 Nemzetkozi Kriminologiai Kongresszus eloadasaibol. Budapest: Magyar Krimoinologiai Tarsasag, 1994 (ISBN 963 8016 02 7) pp. 24-40.
34. Lawrence W. Sherman and Dennis P. Rogan
1995. "Effects of Gun Seizures on Gun Violence: Hot Spot Patrols in Kansas City" Justice Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 4.
· Reprinted: David H. Bayley, ed., What Works in Policing. N.Y.: Oxford University press.
35. Lawrence W. Sherman and David Weisburd
1995. "General Deterrent Effects of Police Patrol in Crime Hot Spots: A Randomized, Controlled Trial." Justice Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 4: 635-648.
36. Lawrence W. Sherman and Dennis P. Rogan
1995. "Deterrent Effects of Police Raids on Crack Houses: A Randomized, Controlled Experiment" Justice Quarterly, Vol. 12, No. 4.
37. Raymond Paternoster, Robert Brame, Ronet Bachman and Lawrence W. Sherman
1997 "Do Fair Procedures Matter? The Effect of Procedural Justice on Spouse
Assault." Law and Society Review, 31: 163-204.
38. Lawrence W. Sherman
1998 "Criminology and Crime Prevention in the 21st Century." International Annals of Criminology, December.
Translated by J.L. de la Cuesta into Spanish and published as "Criminología y prevención crimen, s. XXI" in Revista Electrónica de Derecho Penal y Criminología ISSN 1695-0194 RECPC 05 (2003) [edición abierta] http://criminet.ugr.es/recpc/05/recpc05-r2.pdf.
39. Lawrence W. Sherman
2000 “Gun Carrying and Homicide Prevention” Journal of the American Medical Association 283: 1193-1195. March 1.
40. Lawrence W. Sherman
2000 “Reducing Incarceration Rates: The Promise of Experimental Criminology. Crime and Delinquency 46 (3): 299-314.
41. Lawrence W. Sherman
2000 “Domestic Violence and Restorative Justice: Answering Key Questions.” Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law Vol. 8 (No. 1) pp. 263-289.
42. Lawrence W. Sherman
2002. “Trust and Confidence in Criminal Justice.” National Institute of Justice Journal 248: 23-31.
Reprinted: pp. 8-17 in Quint C. Thurman and Jihong Zhao, eds., Contemporary Policing: Controversias, Challenges, and Solutions. Los Angeles: Roxbury Publishing.
43. Lawrence W. Sherman
2003 “Reason for Emotion: Reinventing Justice with Theories, Innovations and Research. 2002 ASC Presidential Address” Criminology 41 (1): 1-38.
44. Lawrence W. Sherman 2004 “Evidence-Based Crime Prevention: A Global View From the U.S.” JAPANESE JOURNAL OF SCOIOLOGICAL CRIMINOLOGY (in English and Japanese).
45. Lawrence W. Sherman, Heather Strang, Caroline Angel, Daniel Woods, Meredith
Meredith Rossner, Geoffrey C. Barnes, Sarah Bennett and Nova Inkpen, 2005 “Effects of Face-to-Face Restorative Justice on Victims of Crime in Four Randomized, Controlled Trials” JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY (1: 3)
D. Original Chapters in Specially Edited Journals and Books
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974 "Introduction: Towards a Sociological Theory of Police Corruption," pp. 1-39 in L.W. Sherman, Ed., Police Corruption: A Sociological Perspective. New York: Anchor Books/Doubleday.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974 "Becoming Bent: Moral Careers of Corrupt Policemen," pp. 191-208, in L.W. Sherman, Ed., Police Corruption: A Sociological Perspective.
· Reprinted: Robert Culbertson and Mark Tezak, Order Under Law: Readings in Criminal Justice. Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press, Inc. (1981).
· also reprinted at pp. 253-265 in Frederick Elliston and Michael Feldberg, eds., Moral Issues in Police Work. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman and Allanheld/Littlefield, Adams and Co. (1985) 3.
3. Lawrence W. Sherman
1974 "Police Corruption Control: New York, London, Paris," pp. 213-245 in L.W. Sherman, Ed., Police Corruption: A Sociological Perspective.
· Reprinted as "Who Polices the Police: New York, London, Paris?", pp. 13-22 in Donal E. J. MacNamara and Marc Reidel, Eds., Police: Perspectives, Problems, Prospects. New York: Praeger (1974).
4. Lawrence W. Sherman
1977 "Police Corruption Control: Environmental Context vs. Organizational Policy," pp. 143-155 in David H. Bayley, Ed., Police and Society. Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications, Inc.
· Reprinted as "Scandal and Reform," pp. 369-380 in Carl Klockars, Ed., Thinking About Police. New York: McGraw-Hill (1983).
5. Lawrence W. Sherman
1978 "The Case of Neighborhood Team Policing," in Richard R. Nelson and Douglas T. Yates, Eds., Innovation and Implementation in Public Organizations. Lexington, Mass.: D.C. Heath.
6. Lawrence W. Sherman
1978 "Legal Issues in Law Enforcement," pp. 119-149 in Alvin W. Cohn, Ed. 9, Sage Criminal Justice Annuals: The Future of Policing. Beverly Hills, California: Sage Publications, Inc.
7. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 "The Effects of Police Reform on Political Culture: Three Case Studies," pp. 37-57 in David M. Peterson, Ed., The Police: Strategies and Outcomes in Law Enforcement. Beverly Hills, California: Sage Publications, Inc.
8. Lawrence W. Sherman
1980 "Perspectives on Police and Violence," pp. 1-12 in The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 4 52 (November).
9. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "Riot: Enforcement and Control," pp. 1387-1393 in Encyclopedia of Crime and Justice. New York: Free Press.
10. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "Reducing Police Gun Use: Critical Events, Administrative Policy and Organizational Change," pp. 98-125 in Maurice Punch, Ed., Control in the Police Organization. Cambridge, Massachusetts: M.I.T. Press. [Cited by the U.S. Supreme Court in Tennessee V. Garner, 1984.]
· Portions Reprinted: James Levine, Michael Musheno, and Dennis Palumbo, Criminal Justice: Law In Action. New York: John Wiley (l986).
11. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "Police in the Laboratory of Criminal Justice," pp. 26-43 1983 in Kenneth R. Feiberg, Editor, Violent Crime in America. Washington, D.C.: National Policy Exchange.
· Reprinted: Roger G. Dunham and Geoffrey P. Alpert, Critical Issues in Policing: Contemporary Readings. Prospect Heights, Illinois: Waveland Press (1989) (1993) (1997).
12. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "After the Riots: Police and Minorities in the United States," pp. 212-235 in Nathan Glazer and Ken Young, Eds., Ethnic Pluralism and Public Policy: Achieving Equality in the United States and Britain. London, England: Heinemann Educational Books, and Lexington, Massachusetts: D.C. Heath.
13. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "Patrol Strategies for Police," pp. 145-163 in James Q. Wilson, editor, Crime and Public Policy. San Francisco, California: ICS Press/Transaction Books (An earlier version appeared as "Watching and Crime Prevention: New Directions for Police," Journal of Contemporary Studies) V,4:87-101 (1982).
14. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "From Whodunit to Who Does It: Fairness and Target Selection in Deceptive Investigations," pp. 118-134 in Gerald M. Caplan, editor, Abscam Ethics: Moral Issues and Deceptive Investigations. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Ballinger Books.
· Reprinted as "Equity Against Truth: Value Choices in Deceptive Investigations," pp. ll7-l32 in William Heffernan and Timothy Stroup, Eds., Police Ethics: Hard Choices in Law Enforcement. New York, New York: John Jay Press (1985).
15. Lawrence W. Sherman
1983 "The Police Executive as Statesman," pp. 459-466 in William Geller and Wayne Kerstetter, Eds., Police Professionalism. N.Y.: Praeger, and American Bar Foundation.
16. Richard A. Berk and Lawrence W. Sherman
1985 "Data Collection Strategies in the Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment", pp.35-48 in Leigh Burstein, Howard E. Freeman, and Peter H. Rossi, Collecting Evaluation Data: Problems and Solutions. Beverly Hills, Ca.: Sage
17. Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk
1985 "The Randomization of Arrest." Pp. 15-25 in Robert F. Boruch and Werner Wothke, Eds., New Directions for Program Evaluation, Number 28: Randomization and Experimentation [San Francisco: Jossey-Bass]
18. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989 "Walk Your Talk: Implementing Community Crime Prevention Programs" pp. 34-41 in Albert J. Reiss, Jr., editor, Communities and Crime: Workshop Proceedings. Washington, D.C.: National Research Council, National Academy of Sciences.
19. Lawrence W. Sherman, Janell D. Schmidt, Dennis Rogan, and Christine De Riso
1991 "Predicting Domestic Homicide: Prior Police Contact and Gun Threats." pp. 73-94 in Michael Steinman, ed., Woman Battering: Policy Responses. An Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Book. Cincinnati, Oh.: Anderson Publishing. Preprinted as Crime Control Reports #8.
20. David Weisburd, Lisa Maher and Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Contrasting Crime-Specific and Crime-General Theory: Hot Spots of
Predatory Crime." pp. 45-70 in Freda Adler and William S. Laufer, eds., Advances in Criminological Theory, Vol. 4. New Brunswick: Transaction.
21. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Why Crime Control Is Not Reactionary." in David Weisburd and Craig D. Uchida, eds., Police Innovation and The Rule of Law. N.Y.: Springer-Verlag.
22. Lawrence W. Sherman
1993 "Preventing Homicide Through Trial and Error." pp. 21-33 in Heather Strang, ed., Homicide: Patterns, Prevention and Control. Canberra, ACT: Australian Institute of Criminology
23. Lawrence W. Sherman
1995 "The Police" pp. 327-348 in James Q. Wilson and Joan Petersilia, eds., Crime. San Francisco, CA: Institute for Contemporary Studies.
24. Lawrence W. Sherman
1995 "Public Regulation of Private Crime Prevention" Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science Vol. 539, pp. 102-113.
25. Lawrence W. Sherman
1995 "Hot Spots of Crime and Criminal Careers of Places." pp. 35-52 in John E. Eck and David Weisburd, eds., Crime and Place. Crime Prevention Studies, Vol. 4. Monsey, NY: Criminal Justice Press.
26. Lawrence W. Sherman and David Weisburd
1995 "Does Patrol Prevent Crime? The Minneapolis Hot Spots Experiment." pp. 87-95 in Koichi Miyazawa and Setsuo Miyazawa, eds., Crime Prevention in the Urban Community. Deveneter and Boston: Kluwer Law and Taxation Publishers.
27. Lawrence W. Sherman
1995 "The Truly Conceited: Ex Cathedra Doctrine and the Policing of Crime." The Australian and New Zealand Journal of Criminology, Special Supplementary Issue on Crime, Criminology and Public Policy, ed. by David Dixon, pp. 45-51.
28. Lawrence W. Sherman
1998 "American Policing." pp. 429-456 in Michael Tonry, ed., The 1998 Handbook of Crime and Punishment. NY: Oxford University Press.
28. Lawrence W. Sherman
1999 “Restorative Policing: The Canberra, Australia Experiment” pp. 195-208 in Corina Sole Brito and Tracy Allan, eds., Problem-Oriented Policing: Crime-Specific Problems, Critical Issues and Making POP Work. Washington, D.C.: Police Executive Research Forum
29. Lawrence W. Sherman, 2000.
2000 “The Safe and Drug-Free Schools Program.” Pp. 125-155 in Diane Ravitch, ed., Brookings Papers on Education Policy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.
30. Lawrence W. Sherman.
2001. “Two Protestant Ethics and the Spirit of Restoration. Pp. 35-55 In Heather Strang and John Braithwaite, eds., Restorative Justice and Civil Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
31. Lawrence W. Sherman
2001. “Consent of the Governed: Police, Democracy and Diversity“ In Menachem Amir and Stanley Einstein, eds, Policing, Security and democracy: Theory and Practice. Hunstville, TX: OICJ (www.oicj.org).
32. Lawrence W. Sherman
2001. “Fair and Effective Policing.” In James Q. Wilson and Joan Petersilia, editors, Crime: Public Policies for Crime Control. San Francisco: ICS Press.
33. Lawrence W. Sherman
2002. “Evidence-Based Policing: Social Organization of Information for Social Control.”
pp. 217-248 in Elin Waring and David Weisburd, Editors, Crime and Social Organization, Vol. 10, Advances in Criminological Theory. New Brunswick and London: Transaction Publishers.
34. Lawrence W. Sherman and John E. Eck
2002. “Policing for Crime Prevention.” Pp. 295-329 in Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon Welsh, and Doris MacKenzie (eds.). Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. London: Routledge.
35. Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon C. Welsh and Doris Layton MacKenzie 2002 “Preventing Crime.” Pp. 1-12 in Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon Welsh, and Doris MacKenzie (eds.). Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. London: Routledge.
36. David P. Farrington, Denise C. Gottfredson, Lawrence W. Sherman and Brandon C. Welsh
2002 “The Maryland Scientific Methods Scale.” Pp. 13-21 in Lawrence W. Sherman, David P. Farrington, Brandon Welsh, and Doris MacKenzie (eds.) Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. London: Routledge.
37.Lawrence W. Sherman, Heather Strang, and Daniel Woods
2003 “Captains of Restorative Justice: Experience, Legitimacy, and Recidivism by Type of Offense. Pp. 229-248 in Elmar Weitekamp and Hans-Juergen Kerner, eds., Restorative Justice in Context: International Practice and Direction. Dorset: Willan.
38. Lawrence W. Sherman
2003 “Misleading Evidence and Evidence-Led Policy: Making Social Science More Experimental.”Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 589: 6-19.
39. Lawrence W. Sherman
2003 “Crime and Delinquency.” Pp. 221-230 in Douglas J. Besharov, ed., Family and Child Well-Being After Welfare Reform. New Brunswick and London: Trans-Action.
40.Lawrence W. Sherman,
2004 “Research and Policing: The Infrastructure and Political Economy of Federal Funding.” Pp. in Wesley Skogan, ed., “To Better Serve and Protect” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 593 pp. 1-12.
41. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
2004. “Verdicts or Inventions? Interpreting Randomized Controlled Trials in Criminology.” In Donald P. Green and Alan S. Gerber, eds, Experimental Methods in the Political Sciences. American Behavioral Scientist 47 (5): 575-607.
42. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
2004 “Experimental Ethnography: The Marriage of Qualitative and Quantitative Research” in Elijah Anderson, Scott N. Brooks, Raymond Gunn and Nikki Jones, eds. Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 595.
43. Lawrence W. Sherman
2005 “The Use and Usefulness of Criminology, 1751 to 2005: Enlightened Justice and Its Failures” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 600.
E. Monographs
1. Lawrence W. Sherman, Catherine H. Milton, and Thomas Kelley, with a foreword by James Q. Wilson
1973 Team Policing: Seven Case Studies. Washington, D.C.: The Police Foundation, 108 pp. · Sections reprinted in Roy R. Roberg, The Changing Police Role. (San Jose, California: Justice Systems Development, Inc., 1976), pp. 285-299.
· Steven G. Brandl and David E. Barlow, eds., Classics in Policing. Cincinnati, OH: Anderson, 1996. pp. 311-328.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman
1977 City Politics, Police Administrators, and Corruption Control. New York: The John Jay Press, 30 pp.
3. · Controlling Police Corruption: The Effects of Reform Policies. Summary Report. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 14 pp.
· Portions reprinted in Edward A. Thibault, Proactive Police Management. Englewood Cliffs, N.J.: Prentice-Hall, 1984.
3. Lawrence W. Sherman
1981 The Teaching of Ethics in Criminology and Criminal Justice. Chicago, Illinois: Joint Commission on Criminology and Criminal Justice Education Standards. Revised and republished as 1982 Ethics in Criminal Justice Education. Hastings-On-Hudson, New York: The Hastings Center, 84 pp.
4. Craig D. Uchida, Lawrence W. Sherman, and James J. Fyfe
1981 Police Shootings and the Prosecutor in Los Angeles: An Evaluation of Operation Rollout. Washington, D.C.: The Police Foundation, 38 pp.
5. Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk
1984 The Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation Reports, #1, 8 pp. · Reprinted: Robert J. Homant and Daniel B. Kennedy, editors, Police and Law Enforcement, Volume 4, l985. New York: AMS Press, inc. pp.118-131
· in James J. Fyfe, Editor. Police Management: Issues and Case Studies. Washington, D.C. : International City Management Association, 1985. pp. 297-310
· in Steven G. Brandl and David E. Barlow, eds., Classics in Policing. Cincinnati, OH: Anderson, 1996.
6. Lawrence W. Sherman and Barry D. Glick
1984 The Quality of Police Arrest Statistics. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation Reports #2, 8 pp.
7. Lawrence W. Sherman and Jody Klein
1984 Major Lawsuits Over Crime and Security: Trends and Patterns, 1958-82. Institute of Criminal Justice and Criminology, University of Maryland, 55 pp.
8. Lawrence W. Sherman
1984 Protecting Customers from Crime: Draft Standards with Commentary for Determining the Foresee ability of Crime and Adequacy of Security on Premises Open to the Public. Washington, D.C.: Security Law Institute, 63 pp.
9. Lawrence W. Sherman and Ellen G. Cohn with Edwin E. Hamilton
1986 Police Policy On Domestic Violence: A National Survey. Crime Control Reports #1. Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute, 11 pp.
10. Lawrence W. Sherman and Ellen G. Cohn
1986 Citizens Killed by Big-City Police, l970-84. Crime Control Reports #2. Washington, D.C. : Crime Control Institute, 44 pp.
11. Ray R. Lewis and Lawrence W. Sherman
1986 Drunk Driving Tests In Fatal Accidents. Crime Control Reports #3. Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute, 28 pp.
12. Antony M. Pate, Mary Ann Wycoff, Wesley Skogan and Lawrence W. Sherman
1986 Reducing Fear of Crime in Houston and Newark. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation, 48 pp.
13. Susan E. Martin and Lawrence W. Sherman
1986 The Washington, D.C. Repeat Offender Experiment. Washington, D.C.: Police Foundation. · Reprinted: Robert J. Homant and Daniel B. Kennedy, Police and Law Enforcement, Volume 5. New York: AMS Press, 1987.
· Pp. 136-149 in Dennis Kenney, ed., Police and Policing. New York: Praeger, 1989.
14. Lawrence W. Sherman
l987 Repeat Calls To Police In Minneapolis. Crime Control Reports 4. Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute, 18 pp. · Reprinted: pp. 150-165 in Dennis Kenney, editor, Police and Policing, New York: Praeger, 1989.
· Reprinted in Victor E. Kappeler, Larry K. Gaines and Gary Cordner, Police Operations: Analysis and Evaluations. Cincinnati, OH: Anderson.
15. Ellen G. Cohn and Lawrence W. Sherman
l987 Police Policy on Domestic Violence, l986: A National Survey Crime Control Reports # 5. Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute, 15 pp.
16. Lawrence W. Sherman, Christine DeRiso, Danee Gaines, Dennis Rogan, and Ellen G. Cohn
1989 Police Murdered In Drug-Related Situations, 1972-88. Crime Control Reports Washington, D.C.: Crime Control Institute.
17. Lawrence W. Sherman, James Shaw and Dennis Rogan
1995 The Kansas City Gun Experiment. Washington, D.C.: National Institute of Justice.
18. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
1996 “Policing Domestic Violence: The Problem-Solving Paradigm.” Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
19. Lawrence W. Sherman, Denise Gottfredson, Doris MacKenzie, Peter Reuter, John Eck and Shawn Bushway
1997 Preventing Crime: What Works, What Doesn't, What's Promising. A Report to the U.S. Congress. Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Justice, 655 pp.
20. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
1997. The Right Kind of Shame for Crime Prevention. RISE Working Paper No. 1. Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
21. Heather Strang and Lawrence W. Sherman
1997 The Victim’s Perspective. RISE Working Papers No. 2. Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
22. Lawrence W. Sherman and Geoffrey C. Barnes
1997. Restorative Justice and Offenders’ Respect for the Law. RISE Working Paper No. 3. Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
23. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
1997 Restorative Justice and Deterring Crime. RISE Working Paper No. 4. Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
24. Lawrence W. Sherman, John Braithwaite, Heather Strang, Geoffrey C. Barnes, Jane Christie-Johnston, Sandra Smith, and Nova Inkpen.
1997 EXPERIMENTS IN RESTORATIVE POLICING. Reintegrative Shaming of Violence, Drink Driving & Property Crime: A Randomised Controlled Trial. Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
25. Lawrence W. Sherman
1998 Research in Brief. Preventing Crime: What Works, What Doesn't, What's Promising. Washington, DC: National Institute of Justice, 20 pp.
26. Lawrence W. Sherman
1998 Evidence-Based Policing. Washington, DC: Police Foundation. Ideas in American Policing Series.(www.policefoundation.org)
27. Lawrence W. Sherman, Heather Strang, Geoffrey C. Barnes, et al.
1998 EXPERIMENTS IN RESTORATIVE POLICING 1998. A Progress Report on the Canberra Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE). Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
28. Heather Strang, Geoffrey Barnes, John Braithwaite and Lawrence W. Sherman
1999 EXPERIMENTS IN RESTORATIVE POLICING 1999. A Progress Report on the Canberra Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE). Canberra: Australian National University, Research School of Social Sciences. (www. aic.gov.au/rjustice/rise/index.html).
29. Lawrence W. Sherman, Heather Strang, and Daniel J. Woods
2000 “Recidivism Patterns in the Canberra Reintegrative Shaming Experiments (RISE)”
Canberra: Centre for Restorative Justice, Research School of Social Sciences, Australian National University.
30. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang, with Daniel J. Woods, Caroline M. Angel,
Nova Inkpen, Dorothy Newbury-Birch, and Sarah Bennett
2004 “Restorative Justice: What We Know and How We Know It.” Jerry Lee Program, on Randomized Trials in restorative Justice. Working Paper #1, with Powerpoints. www.crim.upenn.edu
.
REVIEW ESSAYS
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1977 "Law Enforcement in a Democracy: A Review of Policing a Free Society," by Herman Goldstein. Criminal Law Bulletin 13, 5:401-409.
2. __________________
1978 The Behavior of Law, by Donald Black. Contemporary Sociology 7, 1:10-15.
3. __________________
1991. "Problem-Oriented Policing by Herman Goldstein" Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology , Vol. 82 (3), pp. 690-707.
4. ___________________
2003 “Experimental Evidence and Governmental Administration.” Review of Frederick Mosteller and Robert Boruch, eds, “Evidence Matters: Randomized Trials in Education Research.” Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution, 2002.
G. NEWSPAPER ARTICLES
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1981. Transcribed Interview on Gun Control, The New York Times, April 5, p.E3.
2. Lawrence W. Sherman
1982. "There's A Fair Way To Nab Capitol Crooks," Los Angeles Times, May 2. Reprinted in three other newspapers.
3. Lawrence W. Sherman and Eva F. Sherman
l983. "Crime Liability: A New Business Burden," Los Angeles Times, January 13. Reprinted in thirteen other newspapers.
4. Lawrence W. Sherman
1984. "Dogging Could-Be Felons: How Short a Leash?", Wall Street Journal,
May 9.
5. Lawrence W. Sherman and Anthony V. Bouza
1984. "The Need to Police Domestic Violence," Wall Street Journal, May 22.
6. Lawrence W. Sherman
1986. "Uncertain Risks, Uneasy Criminals," Wall Street Journal, September 11.
7. Lawrence W. Sherman
1986. "Make Sure Job Seekers Are Not Career Criminals," Wall Street Journal, October 6.
· Reprinted: Roger Miners and Al Ringleb, The Legal Environment of Business. St Paul, Minn.: West Publishing Co., l987.
8. Lawrence W. Sherman
1987. "What's New In Prison Jewelry." Wall Street Journal, January.
9. Lawrence W. Sherman
1987. "Free Police From the Shackles of 911," Wall Street Journal, March 20.
10. Lawrence W. Sherman
1987 "Changes in Hiring of Police Would Arrest Trouble," Wall Street Journal, August 26.
· Reprinted: Oklahoma State Trooper's Journal, l987.
11. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989. "Why Clean Sweeps Shouldn't Be Condemned" The Washington Post, January
12. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989. "The Death of Euclid Lewis." Wall Street Journal, July 10.
· Reprinted: Deanne Milan, ed. Improving Reading Skills. N.Y.: McGraw-Hill.
13. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989. "Police Corps Plan is Poor Weapon Against Crime." Wall Street Journal, August 2, p. A 14.
14. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989. "The Drug Battle Doesn't Need Martyrs." New York Times, August 15, p. A 21.
15. Lawrence W. Sherman
1989. "Business and Urban Crime: Battles Won and Lost: Small Merchants' Big Burdens" Wall Street Journal, October 23, p. A 14.
16. Lawrence W. Sherman
1990. "Patrols Are Better Than Arrests" New York Times, September 22, 1990, p. 23.
17. Lawrence W. Sherman
1997 "Hot Spots and Shame" Baltimore Sun, February 11, p. 5c.
18. Lawrence W. Sherman and Heather Strang
1997"Hopeful Experiment in Justice" Canberra (Australia) Times, April 22, p. 1.
19. Lawrence W. Sherman
1997 "A Bottom Line for Crime" Wall Street Journal, August 6.
20. Lawrence W. Sherman
1998 "Family Conferences Are Fine, But Do They Really Work?" New Zealand Herald, Nov. 2, p. A14.
21. __________________
1998"Needed: Better Ways to Count Crooks" Wall Street Journal, December 3.
H.
ARTICLES IN POLICY AND PRACTITIONER JOURNALS
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1972 "Street Work History Includes Three Stages," YMCA Forum 53 (May) 5:17-24. (Published version of A.M. thesis, University of Chicago, l970).
2. Lawrence W. Sherman and Warren Bennis
1977 "Higher Education for Police Officers: The Central Issues," Police Chief XLIV (August) 8:32-34.
3. __________________
1978 "Higher Education for Police Officers: The Central Issues," Police Chief XLIV (August) 8:32-34.
· Reprinted: ACJS Today 1, 5:9-14 (1977). Training Aids Digest 2, 11:103 (1977).
4. __________________
1978 "College Education for Police: The Reform That Failed?," Police Studies: The International Review of Police Development 1, 4:32-38.
5. __________________
1979 "The Case for the Research Police Department," Police Magazine 2, 6:58-59.
6. __________________ "Learning Police Ethics," Criminal Justice Ethics, Vol. 1, No.2, pp. 10-19.
· Reprinted: John Sullivan and Joseph Victor, eds., Annual Editions: Criminal Justice Guilford, Connecticut: Dushkin Publishing, l988.
· Karen M. Hess, Criminal Procedure, St. Paul: West Publishing.
· Henry Wrobleski and Karen Hess, Introduction to Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice 3rd edition. St. Paul: West Publishing.
· Karen M. Hess and J. Scott Harr, Seeking Employment in Law Forcement, Private Security, and Related Fields, St Paul: West, 1990.
· Michael C. Braswell, Belinda R. McCarthy, and Bernard J. McCarthy, eds., Justice, Crime and Ethics. Cincinnati, OH.: Anderson, 1991.
· Paul Cromwell, ed., Criminal Justice, Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1996.
7. __________________ and Eva F. Sherman
1984 "What is Adequate Security?", Security Management 27, 1:24-26.
8. __________________
1984 "Should Police Target Repeat Offenders?", Hastings Center Report, April, pp. 18-19.
9. __________________
1986 Learning What Works: A Draft Research Agenda on the Effectiveness and Adequacy of Security on Public Premises", pp. 7-l4 in Journal of Healthcare Protection Management (publication of the International Association for Hospital Security), Vol. l, No. 3.
10. __________________
1990"Police Crackdowns," NIJ Reports, March.
· Reprinted: State Police Officers Journal (summer 1990) pp. 99-102, 124.
I. WORKSHOP ARTICLES as contributing Editor,
CRIMINAL LAW BULLETIN
1. Lawrence W. Sherman
1978 "The Breakdown of the Police Code of Silence," Criminal Law Bulletin 14, 4:343-346.
2. __________________
1977 "PROMIS - Police Officers' Conviction Rates: Some Implications For Use by Defense Counsel," Criminal Law Bulletin 14, 3:239-242.
3. __________________
1978 "Traffic Stops and Police Officers' Authority: A Comment on Pennsylvania v. Mimms," Criminal Law Bulletin 14, 343-346.
4. __________________
1978 "College Requirements for Police," Criminal Law Bulletin 14, 5:441-446.
5. __________________
1978 "Minority Quotas for Police Promotions," Criminal Law Bulletin 14, 5:441-446.
6. __________________
1979 "Suing the Police," Criminal Law Bulletin 15,2:168-171.
7. __________________
1979 "Police Discretion and Automobile Stops," Criminal Law Bulletin 15, 3:248-253.
8. __________________
1979 "The Boundaries of Interrogation," Criminal Law Bulletin 15, 4:366-372.
9. __________________
1979 "Obtaining Access to Police Internal Investigation Files," Criminal Law Bulletin 15, 5:499-562.
10. __________________
1979 "Pretrial Police Procedures and the Presumption of Innocence" Criminal Law Bulletin 15, 6:577-580.
11. __________________
1980 "Chartering the F.B.I.," Criminal Law Bulletin 16, 1.
12. __________________
1980 "The Police and the Mandatory Gun Law," Criminal Law Bulletin 16, 2:164-167.
13. __________________
1980 "Defining Arrests: The Practical Consequences of Agency Differences," (Part
I), Criminal Law Bulletin 16, 4.
14. __________________
1980 "Defining Arrests: The Practical Consequences of Agency Differences," (Part II), Criminal Law Bulletin 16, 5:468-471.
J. "LEGAL BRIEFS" COLUMNS FOR SECURITY MAGAZINE (WITH EVA F. SHERMAN)
1. (l986) "Cut Back on Protection of People at Your Peril", September, pp. 31-32.
2. (1986) "Accepting A Service Advice Can Create Courtroom Conflict", October, pp.29-30.
3. (l986) "Criminal Record Checks Clash With Vital Public Interests", December, pp. 25-26.
4. (l987) "Inaction Breeds Negligence", January, pp. 27-28.
5. (1987) "Arbitration Needed to Pass Drug Tests of Union Employees", February, pp. 29-30.
6. (l987) "Avoid Slander in Silence", March, pp. 35-36.
7. (l987) "Training Hires is a Lesson in Bottom-Line Management", April, 27-28.
8. (l987) "Neglected Parking Areas Store Bumper Crop of Risks", May, pp. 33-34.
9. (l987) "Firm Ground Needed to Search Employee Offices", June, pp. 29-30.
10. (l987) "Checking Telephone Calls Can Answer Questions of Liability", July, pp. 21-22. Reprinted by International Association of Shopping Centers, 1989
11. (l987) "Free Speech Can Be Costly When Policies Are Too Broad", August, pp.29-30.
K. BOOK REVIEWS
1. The New Criminology: For A Social Theory of Deviance by Ian Taylor, Paul Walton, and Jock Young, with a foreword by Alvin W. Gouldner (1973) in American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 80, No. 4 January, 1975) 1048-1050.
2. Policing America, edited by Anthony Platt and Lynn Cooper (1974) in Contemporary Sociology, Vol. 4, No. 1 (January, 1975) 58-59.
3. Fundamentals of Criminal Behavior and Correctional Systems by John G. Cull and Richard E. Hardy (1973) in Contemporary Sociology, Vol. 4, No. 3 (May, 1975) 249-250.
4. Police Intelligence: The Operations of an Investigative Unit by Anthony V. Bouza (1976) in Journal of Police Science and Administration, Vol. 4, No. 3 (September, 1976).
5. Beneath the Badge by Herbert Biegel and Allen Biegel in The Chicago Sun Times (September 25, 1977).
6. Commissioner: A View from the Top of American Law Enforcement by Patrick V. Murphy and Thomas Plate in The Chicago Sun Times (January 8, 1978).
7. The Man Who Beat Clout City by Robert McClory in The Chicago Sun Times (March 5, 1978).
8. Deviance and Decency: The Ethics of Research with Human Subjects, edited by Carl Klockars and Finbarr O'Connor Contemporary Psychology (1981).
9. Armed Robbery: Cops, Robbers and Victims, by Thomas Gabor and 5 others. Contemporary Sociology, 18 (1): 104-105 (1989).
10. Point Blank: Guns and Violence in America, by Gary Kleck. The Criminologist, 1993.
L. TESTIMONY BEFORE THE US CONGRESS
1. 1987 Testimony on Police Use of Deadly Force before U.S. House of Representatives Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Hon. John M. Conyers, Chair
2. 1987 Testimony on Reauthorization of National Institute of Justice before House Government Operations Subcommittee
3. 1987 Testimony on Police, Drugs and Homicide in the District of Columbia before the U.S. Senate Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on the District of Columbia, Hon. Robert Packwoood, Chair.
4. 1990 Testimony on Emerging Criminal Justice Issues before the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Hon. Charles Schumer, Chair, April 19, 1990, pp. 220-229, Serial No.126.
5. 1994 Testimony on "Domestic Violence: Not Just a Family Matter." U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Crime and Criminal Justice, Hon. Charles Schumer, Chair, June 30.
6. 1997 Testimony on "Preventing Crime: What Works, What Doesn't, What's Promising" before Committee on Education and the Workforce, Subcommittee on Investigations, Hon. Pete Hoekstra, Chair, June 24, 1997.
7. 1997 Testimony on Youth Violence before US Senate Committee on the Judiciary, Subcommittee on Youth Violence, Jeff Sessions, Chair, October.
8. 1998 Testimony on the Justice Department Budget before the U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Appropriations, Subcommittee on Justice, Commerce and State, Rep. Harold Rogers, Chair, April.
9. 1998 Testimony Before Democratic Forum on Youth Violence, US Senate, with US Attorney General Janet Reno, Senator Christopher Dodd, Chair, May.
10. 1999 Testimony Before the U.S. Senate Finance Committee, May.
11. 1999 Testimony Before the U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Government Reform, Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy, and Human Resources, John Mica, Chair, May.
M. TESTIMONY BEFORE STATE LEGISLATURES, FEDERAL COMMISSIONS,
AND FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
1. 1979 "Regulating Police Practices," pp. 73-79 in Police Practices and the Preservation of Civil Rights. Washington, D.C.: Testimony before the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.
2. "Research and Data Needs," pp. 170-174 in Police Practices and the Preservation of Civil Rights. Washington, D.C.: Testimony before the U.S. Civil Rights Commission.
3. "Arrest for Domestic Violence," Testimony before Senate Judiciary Committee, Maryland General Assembly, March.
4. 1994 "Controlling Police Corruption" Testimony Before the Mollen Commission on Police Corruption, New York City, October.
· Reprinted: New York City Police Department, Police Academy Journal, April, 1994.
5. 1994 "Mandatory Arrest for Domestic Violence," Testimony before Senate Judiciary Committee, Ohio State Legislature, March.
6. 1996 Punishing--And Preventing--Crime: Legislating for More Shame and Fewer Opportunities for Crime" Testimony before Committee on Appropriations, House of Delegates (Jan. 18) and Maryland Bar Association Joint Session of House and Senate judicial committees (Jan. 30), Maryland General Assembly.
7. 1998 Testimony before the Legislative Council (upper house), Parliament of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia, on "Preventing Crime: What Works?" October 27, 1998.
8. 1998 Testimony Before the Maryland General Assembly, orientation for new members, on "Preventing Crime: What Works." December 1.
N. ENDOWED OR NAMED LECTURES
George Beto Lecturer, Sam Houston State University, October, 1988. “Reinventing the Police”
Gwynne Nettler Lecturer, University of Alberta, March, 1989."Hot Spots of Crime and the Criminal Careers of Places"
Frank Cullen Lecturer, University of Cincinnati, May, 1997. “Restorative Justice and Procedural Justice”
Albert M. Greenfield Lecture on Human Relations, University of Pennyslvania, March, 2000 “The Defiant Imagination: Consilience and the Science of Sanctions.”
Endowed Lectures in Criminal Law, New York University Law School, February, 2001. “Trust and Confidence in Criminal Justice.”
GUEST LECTURER (selected):
Oxford University (2002)
Yale University (2002, 1996)
Harvard University (1998, 1981)
Duke University Law School (1993, 1984)
Cambridge University Institute of Criminology (1992, 2002, 2004)
University of Virginia Law School (1999)
Pennsylvania State University (1992, 1997)
Stanford Hoover Institution (1980)
University of Minnesota (1993, 1982, 1994)
University of Arizona (1975)
Kobe University/Japan Urban Security Institute (1992)
Australian Institute of Criminology (1993, 1992, 1985)
U.S. National Academy of Sciences (1987, 1989, 2002, 2003)
FBI National Academy (1980-2000)
Northwestern University (1978, 1988, 1990, 1994, 1996)
Hebrew University, Jerusalem (1999)
Australian National University (1997, 2000)
Franklin and Marshall College (2002)
FUNDED RESEARCH [AS SOLE OR SENIOR AUTHOR OF GRANT PROPOSAL]
1. 06/71-07/73 - Principal Consultant, $21,800 Police Foundation study of team policing in seven cities.
2. 09/72-06/73 - Sole Grantee, $5,500 Ford Foundation Travel and Study Grant, Institute of Criminology, Cambridge University.
3. 09/74-07/76 - Co-Project Director (with Albert J. Reiss, Jr.) of a $33,496 grant from the National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, U.S. Department of Justice, on "Controlling Police Corruption: The Effects of Reform Policies."
4. 04/76-06/78 - Project Director, $146,000 Police Foundation Project on Higher Education for Police Officers.
5. 06/78-09/80 - Project Director, $124,765 grant from the Center of Studies in Crime and Delinquency, National Institute of Mental Health on "Homicide by Police Officers: Social Forces and Public Policy."
6. 09/80-05/83 - Project Director, $56,000 National Science Foundation Study of "Organizational Misconduct."
7. 09/80-05/82 - Co-Project Director (with Barry D. Glick) of $120,000 National Institute of Justice study of "The Validity of Arrest Data for Cross-Sectional Analysis."
8. 10/80-04/81 - Project Director, $30,000 Law Enforcement Assistance Administration Study, "Evaluation of Operation Rollout."
9. 01/81-09/83 - Project Director of $323,000 National Institute of Justice study of "The Use of Arrest in Spouse Assault Cases: A Field Experiment."
10. Project Director of $300,000 Multi-Foundation funded Experiment in First Line Supervision.
11. l982-84 - Overall Supervisor of $2 Million National Institute of Justice grant for Experiments in Fear Reduction.
12. Supervisor of Multi-Foundation funded $850,000 Experiment in Community Crime Prevention.
13. Supervisor of $800,000 evaluation of New York State Gun Law.
14. Project Director, $30,000 National Institute of Justice Grant on "Specific Deterrent Effects of Jail Time For Drunk Driving."
15. 02/83-02/85 - Project Director (with Barry D. Glick) of a $257,000 National Institute of Justice experiment in "The Specific Deterrent Effects of Arrest" for shoplifting.
16. 06/85-08-86 - $43,000 Smith-Richardson Foundation Grant For Book on "Privatizing the Police: Costs and Benefits."
17. l0/85-6/86 - $30,000 National Institute of Justice Grant on "Crackdowns."
18. l986-88 - Project Director of $248,000 National Institute of Justice Grant for "Repeat Complaint Address Policing Experiment: RECAP"
19. l986-9 - Project Director of $700,000 grant for Milwaukee Domestic Violence Arrest Experiment.
20. Project director (with David Weisburd) for $551,000 NIJ grant on "Policing the Hot Spots of Crime: A Field Experiment."
21. Co-Project Director (with David Weisburd) of $189,000 NIJ grant on "Effects of Sanctions on Recidivism: Experimental Evidence."
22. Co-Project Director of $135,000 NIJ grant on "Criminal Careers of Places."
23. Co-Project Director of $110,000 NIJ grant on "Policing Violent Taverns: A RECAP Project."
24. Project Director, $180,000 Subcontract from Kansas City Police Department, NIJ grant on Data, Research and Analysis for Geographic Narcotics Targets.
25. Project Director, $220,000 phase II of DRAGNET.
26. Project Director, $191,000 NIJ grant for evaluation of Kansas City Weed and Seed Project for controlling retail level drug marketplaces.
27. Project Director, $1.5 million Australian National University Project on Re-Integrative Shaming Experiments (RISE), funded by Australian Commonwealth Department of Health and Australian Criminology Research Council.
28. Project Director, $200,000 NIJ grant for Report to the Attorney General on a critical assessment of crime prevention programs.
29. Project Director, $80,000 grant from Maryland Governor's Office of Crime Control and Prevention for Statistical Consulting to Police Agencies on Gun Crime Analysis.
30. Project Director, $100,000 Planning Grant for and Experiment in Gun Crime Reduction, funded by anonymous philanthropic organization.
31. Project Director, $230,000 NIJ Grant on Community Justice Conferences.
32. Project Director, $250,000 Smith Richardson Grant on Preventing Crime: What Works? A Continuation Effort.
33. Project Director, $105,000 Abell Foundation Grant on Crime Prevention in Baltimore: A Review of the Investment Portfolio.
34. 1997-2002 - Project Director, $1.05 Million Jerry Lee Fellowship Fund
35. 2001-2003 – Co-Project Director, $3.5 Million Home Office (U.K.) Project for Developing and Testing Restorative Justice in Courts, Prisons and Probation.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Deputy Criminology Editor, Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology.
1990-1994
Associate Editor, Criminology, l984-87; consultant, 1987-91.
Associate Editor, Evaluation Review, 1988-1991.
Executive Editor, Security Law Newsletter, 1981-2001
Contributing Editor: Criminal Law Bulletin, 1977-1981.
EDITORIAL AND RESEARCH ADVISORY COMMITTEES (SELECTED)
Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, 1980-1995; National Academy of Sciences Workshop on the Future of Department of Justice Research, 1982; National Institute of Mental Health Review Committee, Special Reviewer, 1983; National Institute on Alcoholism and Alcohol Abuse, Special Reviewer, 1984. External Reviewer for National Science Foundation and National Institute of Justice since 1980; National Academy of Sciences Committee on Workshop on Communities and Crime, 1987-88. Program on Human Development and Criminal Behavior Working Committee on Desistance and Continuation of Criminal Careers (NIJ and MacArthur Foundation Project of Castine Research Corp.) 1988.
COMPLETED PH.D. DISSERTATIONS CHAIRED
| Ellen Hochstedler (1980) |
John E. Eck (1994) |
| Craig D. Uchida (1982) |
Christopher Koper (1995) |
| Elizabeth B. Croft (1983) |
Stephanie Sweet (1996) |
| Mark Blumberg (1983) |
June Stansbury Jones (1997) |
| Patrick R. Gartin (1992) |
Geoffrey C. Barnes (1999) |
| Abraham Tennenbaum (1993) |
Angela Moore Parmley (1999) |
| James Shaw (1994) |
Jami Long Onnen (2000)
|
| Elizabeth Marciniak (1994) |
|