NCJ Number
              133637
          Journal
  American Journal of Police Volume: 10 Issue: 2 Dated: (1991) Pages: 87-104
Date Published
  1991
Length
              18 pages
          Annotation
              Three ethical issues related to criminal justice surveys and field experiments are examined: the role of informed consent; the impact of the research design on outcome; and the necessity of confidentiality and immunity.
          Abstract
              Informed consent is of particular relevance to criminal justice research as many study subjects are frequently involved in law-violating or norm-violating behaviors, the exposure of which could have negative personal consequences.  Researchers are often concerned about the impact that requirements of informed consent will have on response rates. This author suggests that, in the absence of circumstances which will result in harm or deprivation, informed consent may not be mandatory. A number of issues surround the proposed research design and recruitment of subjects, particularly when the research uses human subjects in the implementation of random assignment. Guarantees of confidentiality and immunity are believed to have facilitated the study of law-violating behavior and improved the quality of responses provided in surveys. 38 references
          