i find myself writing the same email over and over to grad students who are developing early ideas. and every time i deviate from this approach in my own work my papers go sideways. sharing the latest email in case it is helpful.
Today @DrPhilGoff departed from his prepared remarks to the House Judiciary Committee to debunk a recent study which claimed to find no evidence of racial bias in police shootings. Thanks for alerting lawmakers to this important corrective.
New study of fatal police-involved shootings reported “no overall evidence of anti-Black ... disparities.” @dean_c_knox & I submitted a letter to the editor showing study's approach can't support claim. Journal declined to publish. Sharing here so future research can improve. 1/N
New @The_JOP by @seanjwestwood@SolomonMg@ylelkes shows probabilistic election forecasts like @FiveThirtyEight confuse voters & decrease turnout, mostly among Dems. It’s thorough and innovative experimental behavioral research.
A fan thread. (1/n)
@PNASNews published a study last year claiming no racial bias in police shootings. The study's central claim was mathematically unsupported. @dean_c_knox & I submitted critique to PNAS, which was rejected. We appealed. Today PNAS published our critique.1/n
Estimates of racial bias using police data are wrong if police discriminate in who they stop. New paper w/ @dean_c_knox, @conjugateprior: analysis in Fryer (forthcoming) likely masks hundreds of thousands of instances of discriminatory police violence. 1/n goo.gl/yfPM5r
Policing is a multi-stage process, and bias can occur long before officers ever face civilians. The political decision to have an army ready to face BLM, but only a handful of officers to face the Trump mob, speaks volumes.
WHOA—The US Capitol siege today started at this exact moment — when the Capitol police were completely caught off guard when rioters stormed the fence and overran them. Where was the backup? Why wasn’t the National Guard pre-stationed there? So angry. 😡
Brett Stephens is crediting "Broken Windows" policing strategies like "Stop, Question and Frisk" (SQF) for the nationwide crime drop that began in the 1990s. Let's take a look at the evidence. 1/n
Bret Stephens, Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the New York Times, explains how the NYPD's "broken windows" policy--swiftly and forcefully punishing even petty crimes--can be applied by the United States on a global scale.
I highly recommend working a “normal job” before entering academia, just to appreciate the contrasts. Academia has a lot of problems. But the perks of the job are real.
I see we’re at the stage of anti-academia in here that we’re now claiming with a straight face that it offers less time flexibility and intellectual freedom *on average* than non-academic jobs.
OK.
How do police compare demographically & politically to civilians they serve? We investigate w/ data on officers from 97 of the 100 largest US agencies, more than ⅓ of local police. We also test whether Dem and Rep officers behave differently in Chicago. 🧵scholar.princeton.edu/sites/default/…