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Sherman was right about the need for many more randomized experiments in policing, but wrong about how much medicine was really based on scientific research. New evidence shows that doctors resist changing practices based on new research just as much as police do, if not more so. Closer examination reveals medicine to be a battleground between ...
- POLICE FOUNDATION REPORTS
By Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk. Under a grant...
- POLICE FOUNDATION REPORTS
Lawrence W. Sherman (born October 25, 1949) is an experimental criminologist and police educator who defined evidence-based policing. Since October 2024 he has served as Chief Executive Officer of Benchmark Cambridge, a global police reform organisation. From 2022-24 he was Chief Scientific Officer of the Metropolitan Police at Scotland Yard ...
By Lawrence W. Sherman and Richard A. Berk. Under a grant from the National Institute of Justice, the Minneapolis Police Department and the Police Foundation conducted an experiment from early 1981 to mid-1982 testing police responses to domestic violence. A technical report of the experiment can be found in the April 1984 issue of the American ...
Lawrence W. Sherman. The Rise of Evidence-Based Policing: Targeting, Testing, and Tracking. ABSTRACT. Evidence-based policing is a method of making decisions about “what works” in policing: which practices and strategies accomplish police mis-sions most cost-effectively.
This Report found that some prevention programs work, some do not, some are promising, and some have not been tested adequately. Given the evidence of promising and effective programs, the Report finds that the
by Lawrence W. Sherman, Denise C. Gottfredson, Doris L. MacKenzie, John Eck, Peter Reuter, and Shawn D. Bushway July 1998 These are the major conclusions of a 1997 report to Congress, which was based on a systematic review of more than 500 scientific evaluations of crime prevention practices. This Research in Brief summa-
1 Αυγ 2013 · L. Sherman. Published in Crime and justice 1 August 2013. Political Science, Sociology, Law. Evidence-based policing is a method of making decisions about “what works” in policing: which practices and strategies accomplish police missions most cost-effectively.