Weisburd David
Hebrew University, USA.
Eval Rev. 2003 Jun;27(3):336-54. doi: 10.1177/0193841X03027003007.
In considering the ethical dilemmas associated with randomized experiments, scholars ordinarily focus on the ways in which randomization of treatments or interventions violates accepted norms of conduct of social science research more generally or evaluation of crime and justice questions more specifically. The weight of ethical judgment is thus put on experimental research to justify meeting ethical standards. In this article, it is argued that just the opposite should be true, and that in fact there is a moral imperative for the conduct of randomized experiments in crime and justice. That imperative develops from our professional obligation to provide valid answers to questions about the effectiveness of treatments, practices, and programs. It is supported by a statistical argument that makes randomized experiments the preferred method for ruling out alternative causes of the outcomes observed. Common objections to experimentation are reviewed and found overall to relate more to the failure to institutionalize experimentation than to any inherent limitations in the experimental method and its application in crime and justice settings. It is argued that the failure of crime and justice practitioners, funders, and evaluators to develop a comprehensive infrastructure for experimental evaluation represents a serious violation of professional standards.
在考虑与随机实验相关的伦理困境时,学者们通常关注治疗或干预的随机化在更广泛意义上违反社会科学研究公认行为规范,或更具体地违反犯罪与司法问题评估规范的方式。因此,伦理判断的重心落在实验研究上,以证明其符合伦理标准。在本文中,有人认为事实恰恰相反,实际上在犯罪与司法领域进行随机实验存在道德上的必要性。这种必要性源于我们的职业义务,即要为有关治疗、实践和项目有效性的问题提供有效的答案。它得到了一个统计学论据的支持,该论据使随机实验成为排除所观察到的结果的其他原因的首选方法。对实验的常见反对意见经过审视后发现,总体而言更多地与未能将实验制度化有关,而非与实验方法及其在犯罪与司法环境中的应用的任何固有局限性有关。有人认为,犯罪与司法从业者、资助者和评估者未能为实验评估建立全面的基础设施,这严重违反了专业标准。