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A Criminologist's Guide to R

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A Criminologist's Guide to R

Crime by the Numbers
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Hardback
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Description

A Criminologist's Guide to R: Crime by the Numbers introduces the programming language R and covers the necessary skills to conduct quantitative research in criminology. By the end of this book, a person without any prior programming experience can take raw crime data, be able to clean it, visualize the data, present it using R Markdown, and change it to a format ready for analysis. A Criminologist's Guide to R focuses on skills specifically for criminology such as spatial joins, mapping, and scraping data from PDFs, however any social scientist looking for an introduction to R for data analysis will find this useful. Key Features: Introduction to RStudio including how to change user preference settings. Basic data exploration and cleaning – subsetting, loading data, regular expressions, aggregating data. Graphing with ggplot2. How to make maps (hotspot maps, choropleth maps, interactive maps). Webscraping and PDF scraping. Project management – how to prepare for a project, how to decide which projects to do, best ways to collaborate with people, how to store your code (using git), and how to test your code.

Author Biography:

Jacob Kaplan is the Chief Data Scientist of the Research on Policing Reform and Accountability (RoPRA), a multi-disciplinary, multi-institutional team of social scientists studying the feasibility and efficacy of policing reform, with a focus on statistically rigorous research and practical applications. His current appointment is at the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs. He holds a PhD and a master’s degree in criminology from the University of Pennsylvania and a bachelor’s degree in criminal justice from California State University, Sacramento. He is the author of several R packages that make it easier to work with data, including fastDummies and asciiSetupReader. He is also the author of books on the two primary criminal justice data sets: the FBI’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) Program Data, and the FBI’s National Incident Based Reporting System (NIBRS) data.
Release date Australia
December 15th, 2022
Author
Audiences
  • General (US: Trade)
  • Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations
2 Tables, black and white; 4 Line drawings, color; 45 Line drawings, black and white; 29 Halftones, color; 89 Halftones, black and white; 33 Illustrations, color; 134 Illustrations, black and white
Pages
410
ISBN-13
9781032244075
Product ID
35692946

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