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Statistics in Criminal Justice introduces basic statistics and statistical concepts in a building-block method with each chapter building in sophistication to prepare for the concepts that follow. While emphasizing comprehension and interpretation, rather than computation, the book takes a serious approach to statistics, which is tailored to the real world of crime and justice. This provides the reader with an accessible but sophisticated understanding of statistics as applied to real-life criminal justice problems. The updated and expanded 3rd edition includes additional chapter-end…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Statistics in Criminal Justice introduces basic statistics and statistical concepts in a building-block method with each chapter building in sophistication to prepare for the concepts that follow. While emphasizing comprehension and interpretation, rather than computation, the book takes a serious approach to statistics, which is tailored to the real world of crime and justice. This provides the reader with an accessible but sophisticated understanding of statistics as applied to real-life criminal justice problems. The updated and expanded 3rd edition includes additional chapter-end exercises; expanded computer exercises that can be performed in the Student Version of SPSS; extended discussion of multivariate regression models, including interaction and non-linear effects; a new chapter on multinomial and ordinal logistic regression models, designed for comprehension and interpretation; and additional material on multivariate regression models. The book is designed for undergraduate and beginning graduate statistics courses in criminal justice, and as a reference for researchers.


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Autorenporträt
David Weisburd (Ph.D., Yale University) is a leading researcher and scholar in the field of criminal justice. He is Professor of Criminology at the Hebrew University Law School in Jerusalem and is a professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of Maryland. Professor Weisburd serves as a senior fellow at the Police Foundation in Washington DC, and is a member of the National Academy of Sciences Panel on Police Practices and Polices and the steering committee of the Campbell Crime and Justice Coordinating Group.

Chester Britt (Ph.D, University of Arizona) is a researcher and scholar in the field of criminology. He is Associate Professor in the Administration of Justice Department at Arizona State University West. Professor Britt is the editor for Justice Quarterly. He has published more than twenty scientific articles and book chapters on issues related to the demography of crime, criminal careers, criminal case processing, and statistics.