New paper: "Trust But Verify: Lessons for the Empirical Evaluation of Law and Policy"
In a recent article, Aneja, Donohue and Zhang claim that they are unable to replicate the regressions published by the National Research Council in Chapter 6 of Firearms and Violence. They conclude that the NRC regressions must have been based on bad data supplied by John Lott. The implication is that earlier studies that found that right-to-carry laws reduced crime were flawed because of bad data. However, we can replicate the NRC results with Lott’s original data and with the data set used by the NRC. The earlier studies are not flawed by bad data.
Labels: ConcealedCarry, Guns
1 Comments:
When ideology confronts fact, the inverse of truth is the prefered method of attack.
I must wonder Dr. Lott. Is there a great deal of personal attacks based upon ideology in the academic field? If so, how can anyone expect to make progress if there are those who cannot set aside personal feelings, and simply concentrate on the data and the results that are based upon said data.
After all, in the programming realm, we have a saying; Garbage In, Garbage Out.
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