
LCRM301 Researching Criminology
Topic: Planning
criminological research and
formulating effective
research questions
Acknowledgement of
country
Lecture structure
- Recap
- Identifying a research
topic - Formulating effective
research questions
Overview – key areas of focus
We draw from Davies et al. (2011) to consider: - How our research interests and ideas can be framed as researchable
questions - The role of research questions in designing effective criminological
research - Key principles of designing social and criminological questions
- how to turn a research topic/area into a viable question
- strategies for formulating effective research questions
Recap: where have we been & where to next?
PART ONE: Preparing
criminological research
(Weeks 1-5)
In the first part of the unit, we focus on preparing criminological
research and decision-making processes. This includes deciding on
the topic you want to focus on, the kinds of methods to use and
the types of data to collect. You will
be introduced to key ideas and concepts and test your
understanding in the form of an online quiz (Assessment 1)
learn how to undertake and conduct your own review of existing
research (the literature review) (Assessment 2)
consider ethical principles in criminological research
develop your own research question and begin to lay the
foundation of your own research proposal (Assessment 3)
In this unit, you will be asked to propose a research project of
your choice.
select the topic
formulate a research question
consider what is known about your topic and identify a gap in knowledge (by undertaking a
literature review)
select and develop an appropriate research design where you will outline how you will go
about conducting your research and the methods that you will use
explain why the research project you’ve proposed is significant and needed
In this unit, you will be asked to propose a research project of
your choice.
Learning outcomes:
LO1 – Understand and identify key elements of various forms of ethical research design and
methodology.
LO2 – Critically evaluate current research to identify gaps in the literature.
LO3 – Apply knowledge of a current topic in criminology by developing a proposal for future
research.
Deciding what to research: picking a research topic
Researchable
topics to …
researchable
questions. - What is research?
- What is knowledge?
- What counts as a criminological research topic?
Revision: what are the key features of criminology?
Coleman and Norris (2000, pp. 13-14) define the ‘subject matter’ of criminology: - An attempt to measure the extent of crime and offenders.
- An analysis of the causes of crime
- Understanding how laws are formed
- Understanding how laws are applied
- Understanding issues around punishment
- Crime prevention
- Exploring the impact of crime on victims
- Exploring public attitudes and media presentations of crime
- (Un)intended consequences of policy and law
- Conditions that sustain harm (e.g., via an analysis of the operation of the criminal justice and related
systems)
So, what counts as a criminological research topic?
sentencing practices
domestic and family violence
program evaluation
behaviour change programs & perpetrator intervention programs
policing practices: stop and search
COVID-19 and property crimes
incarceration of young people cybersecurity
police responses to cybercrime
workplace supports for domestic and family
violence victims
gender differences in public attitudes towards parole
joyriding amongst young people in Australia
migrant women and family violence
workplace sexual harassment
Picking a topic. What interests you? - One way to think about this is:
The subject matter of your degree
An interesting unit or module, assessment task
An attractive aspect within that unit or
module
A topic that interests
you (there may be a
few)
Sele
ct 1
Picking a topic. What interests you?
Internship: VIRWC (now Multicultural Women Victoria); interested in issues – DFV and forced and servile
marriage
A key issue the org was facing at the time: temporary migrant women accessing
DFV supports; barred from accessing women’s refuges due to migration status.
Consultation to government – first draft of the National
Action Plan to address Violence against Women &
Children; issues facing temporary visa holders a key point
of advocacy
Analysis of policy protections for
temporary migrant women facing
DFV in Australian context
TOPIC
Preparing criminological research
- What will you study? Identifying the topic and refining the focus
- What is the purpose of your research? For example, is it to
o Explore something
o Describe something
o Explain something
o Evaluate something
Next, we need to consider the purpose of the proposed
research – goals/aims/objectives
- Purpose of the research: Overarching goal of the research. Broadly, there
are four categories of purposes of research: exploratory, descriptive,
explanatory, and evaluation (Rennison & Hart 2023).
- EXPLORATORY RESEARCH
- The purpose or goal of exploratory research is to answer: “What,” “How,” or
“Where” questions: “What is it?” “How is it done?” “Where is it?”
- DESCRIPTIVE RESEARCH
- Descriptive research: Focused description of a topic that answers questions such as
these: “What is it?” “What are the characteristics of it?” “What does it look like?” It
is similar to exploratory research, but it is narrower given knowledge gained by
exploratory research.
- EXPLANATORY RESEARCH
- Explanatory research: Research that provides explanations about a topic by
addressing question such as these: “Why is it?” “How is it?” “What is the effect of
it?” “What causes it?” “What predicts it?”
- EVALUATION RESEARCH
- Evaluation research: Applied systematic assessment of the need for, implementation
of, or output of a program based on objective criteria. By using the data gathered in
evaluation research, the researcher can improve, enhance, expand, or terminate a
program.
What else do we need to consider?
The research literature - Davies et al. (2011) describe the literature review in this way
o Supports the development of the research strategy
o Acts as your “springboard” into the field
o Drawn upon when making sense of the data you collect
The purpose of your research will dictate what type of
data you need to collect and analyse to complete your
project …
Let’s consider the type of data you need
- Secondary data? existing data that has been collected (and/or analysed) by
someone else - Primary data? is new data researchers collect themselves
Let’s consider the type of data you need and the type
of research you will undertake - Quantitative
- Qualitative
Qualitative approach
- aim is understanding and the creation of a
holistic, rich picture - you may know only roughly in advance what
you are looking for - the design emerges as the study unfolds,
enabling a responsive approach to data
collection and analysis - as the researcher you play a subjective role in
data collection and analysis - what does the data look like? How is it
explored and analysed?
Quantitative approach - you will know in advance what you are looking
for (i.e., you will have a working hypothesis) - you will remain ‘objective’ and distinct from the
focus of the research and will use the data to
count, classify or construct statistical models
to explain your observations - what does the data look like? How is it
explored and analysed?
Qualitative approach - Data:
- words, pictures, objects
- activities, behaviours, attitudes
- in-depth interviews
- direct observation
- documentation
- artefacts
- time consuming
- less able to generalize
- In exploring the data:
- seeking relationships between identified
and emerging themes - relate behaviour or ideas to biographical
characteristics of respondents
Quantitative approach - Data
- numbers and statistics
- efficient in testing hypothesis
- Misses contextual detail
- In exploring the data:
- graphs and charts
- cross-tabulations
- seeking patterns and relationships in the
data - comparing means, exploring correlations
Contextualising the purpose of research - Describe, monitor and investigate: both qualitative and quantitative research can provide
evidence, although with different descriptions - Explore: it depends on the form of exploration, but both quantitative and qualitative research can
be used, but will produce different exploratory material - Interpret: qualitative research is especially strong here
- To look behind the surface: usually undertaken using qualitative research
- Evaluate: if it concerns replication and quantification, then quantitative research is appropriate,
although if the aim is to evaluate perspectives, then qualitative forms can be used - Explain: both quantitative and qualitative approaches can be used
- Prove: is mostly a quantitative approach, but can involve qualitative approaches
Purposes contextualized (cont.)
POLICY-RELATED research
Concerned with the
collection of data and the
presentation of conclusions
and arguments as aids to the
formulation of social policies
INTERVENTION-BASED
research
Concerned with evaluating
the effectiveness of
interventions (e.g.,
programs) in producing
intended outcomes
Purposes contextualized (cont.)
THEORETICAL research - understanding and
explaining human
behaviour and social
action, the workings of
social institutions, and how
these connect with
different dimensions of
social structure - primary aim is knowledge
accumulation
CRITICAL research - both theoretical and
policy-related - it often addresses
criminal justice policies
but in a critical vein rather
than as a form of
evaluative research
Reminder: As we have explored, criminology is a
diverse discipline. Pick what is of interest to you
Leading criminologist Sandra Walklate (2005, pp.
2-3) reminds us that while a key focus in
criminology is to explain the causes of crime, how
it
does so will depend on what type of
criminologist you are. What binds criminologists
together is that they share an interest in the same
subject matter, but importantly do not necessarily
share the same way of thinking about how to
study that subject matter.
Formulating effective research questions
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Moving from a topic to a research question - Clearly formulated
- Enable you to tease out the criminological problem you seek to address
- Research question ensures research is feasible and manageable and that the
research can produce valid conclusions
What is a research question? - Research questions are the overarching questions being addressed in a piece of
research. - Hypothesis: Testable statement about the expected relationship between variables.
- Theory: Explanation about how things work. A set of interrelated propositions, assumptions,
and definitions about how the world is expected to work or about how people living in it are
supposed to behave.
What is a research question? (Cont.) - A criminological research question is
(generally) a question about some aspect of
crime that you seek to answer through the
collection and analysis of data
(primary/secondary; qualitative/quantitative)
Example?
How do police perceptions of their own organization influence their views of the public,
specifically their trust of people in the areas they patrol?
How do women with insecure migration status experience and seek help for family violence
and what are their experiences of accessing support in Australia?
Example?
Question – What is the rate of reported residential burglary in Melbourne CBD during the 2020
COVID-19 lockdowns?
What are the rates of dating violence among Latino victims by gender?
Example?
Question – What is the relationship between residential burglary and COVID-19 lockdowns
in Melbourne? (Relational research question)
Question – Do COVID-19 lockdowns have a positive effect on the number of residential
burglaries committed in Melbourne? (Causal – cause and effect)
Example?
- Intervention (i.e., policing practice): What impact does notification of increased
risk have on actions taken by residents and their perception of safety? - Program?
Effective and researchable questions
- are clear (simple is best; no fancy language) and focused on the objectives of the
research. - not too broad; not too narrow
- not be too difficult to answer
- researchable; open ended
- analytical, and not too descriptive
- e.g., ‘how’ ‘what’ and not ‘why’ —
remember: the question defines the scope, scale and conduct of your project.
Gilbert (2008, p. 512): the research question ‘focuses research design and methods
towards the provision of evidenced answers’.
Key takeaways - The research question
o narrows the research focus
o should be capable of being answered in such a way as to allow
conclusions to be drawn about the question(s)
o implies what kinds of data need to be collected; units of analysis about
the data that needs to be collected; the context in which data needs to be
collected

