MyData:What Is MyData? | Login/Account Info | Download Saved Files | Logout Description & Citation--Study No. 9982 | | | ICPSR Study No.: | 9982 |
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Persistent URL:
| http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR09982 |
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| | | Title: | Evaluating Alternative Police Responses to Spouse Assault in Colorado Springs: an Enhanced Replication of the Minneapolis Experiment, 1987-1989 |
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| | | Principal Investigator(s): | Howard Black, Colorado Springs Police Department |
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| Richard Berk, Colorado Springs Police Department |
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| James Lily, Colorado Springs Police Department |
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| Robert Owenbey, Colorado Springs Police Department |
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| Giannina Rikoski, Colorado Springs Police Department |
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| | | Funding Agency: | United States Department of Justice. National
Institute of Justice. |
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| | | Grant Number: | 86-IJ-CX-0045 |
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| | | Bibliographic Citation: | Black, Howard, Richard Berk, James Lily, Robert Owenbey,
and Giannina Rikoski. EVALUATING ALTERNATIVE POLICE RESPONSES TO
SPOUSE ASSAULT IN COLORADO SPRINGS: AN ENHANCED REPLICATION OF THE
MINNEAPOLIS EXPERIMENT, 1987-1989 [Computer file]. Compiled by Howard
Black, Richard Berk, James Lily, Robert Owenbey, and Giannina Rikoski,
Colorado Springs Police Department. ICPSR ed. Ann Arbor, MI:
Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
[producer and distributor], 1994. |
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| | | | Summary: | The purpose of this study was to replicate an experiment in
Minneapolis (MINNEAPOLIS INTERVENTION PROJECT, 1986-1987 [ICPSR 9808])
testing alternative police response to cases of spouse assault, using
a larger number of subjects and a more complex research design. The
study focused on how police response affected subsequent incidents of
spouse assault. Police responses studied included arrest, issuing
emergency protection orders, referring the suspect to counseling,
separating the suspect and the victim, and restoring order only (no
specific action). Data were obtained through initial incident reports,
counseling information, and personal interviews. Follow-up interviews
were conducted at three- and six-month periods, and recidivists were
identified through police and court record checks. Variables from
initial incident reports include number of charges, date, location,
and disposition of charges, weapon(s) used, victim injuries, medical
attention received, behavior towards police, victim and suspect
comments, and demographic information such as race, sex, relationship
to victim/offender, age, and past victim/offender history. Data
collected from counseling forms provide information on demographic
characteristics of the suspect, type of counseling, topics covered in
counseling, suspect's level of participation, and therapist comments.
Court records investigate victim and suspect criminal histories,
including descriptions of charges and their disposition, conditions of
pretrial release, and the victim's contact with pretrial services.
Other variables included in follow-up checks focus on criminal and
offense history of the suspect. The data collection includes separate
data files for the original, second, and final versions of some of the
forms that were used. |
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| | | Subject Term(s): | arrests, counseling, crisis intervention, domestic assault, intervention, intervention strategies, police intervention, police response, recidivism, spouse abuse, victims |
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| | | Geographic Coverage: | Colorado, Colorado Springs, United States |
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| | | Time Period: | March 1987 - April 1989 |
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| | | Date(s) of Collection: | 1987 - 1989 |
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| | | Unit of Observation: | Incidents, individuals, and court cases. |
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| | | Universe: | All domestic violence calls made to the Colorado Springs
Police Department between March 1987 and April 1989. |
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| | | Data Type: | survey data, and event/transaction data |
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| | | Data Collection Notes: | All variables over two columns wide may contain values
of ''-22'', ''-66'', ''-77'', ''-99'', ''X''. These values may or may
not be documented in the codebook. All alphanumeric variables over
seven columns wide with these same values are not listed in the
''MISSING VALUE RECODE'' nor in the ''MISSING VALUES'' files. |
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| | | | Purpose of the Study: | This study employed a factorial design whereby the
police response to spouse assault acted as the independent
variable. Models of domestic violence were developed using two
competing theories: Victim Empowerment and Specific Deterrence. When
an officer arrived at the scene of a domestic violence incident, a
random treatment was assigned via radio dispatch. Officers had final
authority over assignment, and could assign another treatment at their
own discretion. Treatments included arresting the suspect, issuing an
emergency protection order, referring the suspect to counseling,
separating the suspect and the victim, and restoring order only (no
specific action). A unique four-digit project ID number was assigned
to each subject. It was possible for an individual to appear several
times: as a victim in one case and a suspect in another -- as a victim
or suspect in several cases with different partners -- or as a repeat
case that was not properly screened. Follow-up interviews were
conducted with victims at three- and six-month periods. Recidivists
were identified through extensive police and court record checks, and
victim empowerment data were collected with a validated survey
instrument. |
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| | | Study Design: | Variables from initial incident reports include
number of charges, date, location, and disposition of charges, victim
and suspect demographics, weapon(s) used, victim injuries, medical
attention received, behavior towards police, and victim and suspect
comments. Data collected from counseling forms provide information on
suspect demographics, type of counseling, topics covered in
counseling, suspect's level of participation, and therapist comments.
Court records investigate victim and suspect criminal histories,
including descriptions of charges and their disposition, conditions of
pretrial release, and the victim's contact with pretrial services.
Other variables included in follow-up checks focus on criminal and
offense history of the suspect. |
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| | | Sample: | All domestic violence calls made to the Colorado
Springs Police Department were included in the sample. There were
1,202 cases in which the officer imposed a randomly assigned
treatment, 315 cases in which the officer imposed a different
treatment than the one assigned by the dispatcher, 31 cases that
initially had multiple response data that were later clarified, and
110 cases that entered the project more than once during the six-month
period. Two cases had multiple responses that could not be clarified. |
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| | | Data Source: | personal interviews, counseling session forms, and
police and court records |
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| | | Mode of Data Collection: | Data were collected from (1) reports filed by
police officers after the first contact, (2) follow-up interviews with
victims at three- and six-month periods, (3) re-offense information
from official police records, (4) counseling session forms filled out
by suspects' therapists, (5) criminal history and victimization
records, and (6) records from official court proceedings. |
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| | | Response Rates: | Of the 1,150 cases in the project (excluding the
repeat cases), 80 percent received an initial interview. Final
interviews were completed on 1,079 (70 percent) of the 1,202 cases
that received the randomly assigned treatment. |
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| | | Presence of Common Scales: | None |
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| | | | Note: | A list of the data formats available for this study can be found in the
summary of holdings. Detailed file-level information (such as record length, case count, and variable count) is listed in the
file manifest. |
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| | | Original ICPSR Release: | 1994-06-03 |
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| | | Version History: | The last update of this study occurred on 1994-06-03. |
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| 2006-01-12 - All files were removed from dataset 44 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads. |
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| 2006-01-12 - All files were removed from dataset 25 and flagged as study-level files, so that they will accompany all downloads. |
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| | | Dataset(s): | - DS1: Initial Call Implementation Form Data
- DS2: Final Version of Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS3: Second Version of Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS4: Original Version of Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS5: Original Version of Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS6: Second Version of Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS7: Final Version of Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS8: Original Version of Final Victim Interview Data
- DS9: Final Version of Final Victim Interview Data
- DS10: Initial Suspect Criminal History Check Data
- DS11: Initial Victim Criminal History Check Data
- DS12: Six-Month Suspect Criminal History Check Data
- DS13: Six-Month Victim Criminal History Check Data
- DS14: Initial Suspect Charge Check Data
- DS15: Initial Suspect Victimization Check Data
- DS16: Initial Victim Charge Check Data
- DS17: Initial Victim Victimization Check Data
- DS18: Six-Month Suspect Charge Check Data
- DS19: Six-Month Suspect Victimization Check Data
- DS20: Six-Month Victim Charge Check Data
- DS21: Six-Month Victim Victimization Check Data
- DS22: Final Version of Court Penetration Form Data
- DS23: Second Version of Court Penetration Form Data
- DS24: Original Version of Court Penetration Form Data
- DS25: Codebook for All Parts
- DS26: SAS Data Definition Statements for Initial Call
Implementation Form Data
- DS27: SAS Data Definition Statements for Final Version of
Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS28: SAS Data Definition Statements for Second Version of
Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS29: SAS Data Definition Statements for Original Version of
Suspect Counseling Form Data
- DS30: SAS Data Definition Statements for Original Version of
Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS31: SAS Data Definition Statements for Second Version of
Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS32: SAS Data Definition Statements for Final Version of
Initial Victim Interview Data
- DS33: SAS Data Definition Statements for Original Version of
Final Victim Interview Data
- DS34: SAS Data Definition Statements for Final Version of Final
Victim Interview Data
- DS35: SAS Data Definition Statements for Initial Suspect
Criminal History Check Data
- DS36: SAS Data Definition Statements for Initial Victim
Criminal History Check Data
- DS37: SAS Data Definition Statements for Six-Month Suspect
Criminal History Check Data
- DS38: SAS Data Definition Statements for Six-Month Victim
Criminal History Check Data
- DS39: SAS Data Definition Statements for Check Data, Parts
14-21
- DS40: SAS Data Definition Statements for Final Version of Court
Penetration Form Data
- DS41: SAS Data Definition Statements for Second Version of
Court Penetration Form Data
- DS42: SAS Data Definition Statements for Original Version of
Court Penetration Form Data
- DS43: SPSS Data Definition Statements for Check Data, Parts
14-21
- DS44: User Guide
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