The need of police body cameras for the community and the police community in the United States

The need of police body cameras for the community and the police community in" rel="nofollow">in the United States Order Description   Design your own research methodology to address the question: How to address the need of police body cameras for safety of the community and police officers in" rel="nofollow">in the United States of America. Introduce the overall methodological approach for in" rel="nofollow">investigatin" rel="nofollow">ing your research problem. Is your study qualitative or quantitative or a combin" rel="nofollow">ination of both (mixed method)? Are you goin" rel="nofollow">ing to take a special approach, such as action research, or a more neutral stance? Indicate how the approach fits the overall research design. Your methods should have a clear connection with your research problem. In other words, make sure that your methods will actually address the problem. One of the most common deficiencies found in" rel="nofollow">in research papers is that the proposed methodology is not suitable to achievin" rel="nofollow">ing the stated objective of your paper. Describe the specific methods of data collection you are goin" rel="nofollow">ing to use, such as, surveys, in" rel="nofollow">interviews, questionnaires, observation, archival research. If you are analyzin" rel="nofollow">ing existin" rel="nofollow">ing data, such as a data set or archival documents, describe how it was origin" rel="nofollow">inally created or gathered and by whom. Explain" rel="nofollow">in how you in" rel="nofollow">intend to analyze your results. Will you use statistical analysis? Will you use specific theoretical perspectives to help you analyze a text or explain" rel="nofollow">in observed behaviors? Describe how you plan to obtain" rel="nofollow">in an accurate assessment of relationships, patterns, trends, distributions, and possible contradictions found in" rel="nofollow">in the data. Provide background and a rationale for methodologies that are unfamiliar for your readers. Very often in" rel="nofollow">in the social sciences, research problems and the methods for in" rel="nofollow">investigatin" rel="nofollow">ing them require more explanation/rationale than widely accepted rules governin" rel="nofollow">ing the natural and physical sciences. Be clear and concise in" rel="nofollow">in your explanation. Provide a justification for subject selection and samplin" rel="nofollow">ing procedure. For in" rel="nofollow">instance, if you propose to conduct in" rel="nofollow">interviews, how do you in" rel="nofollow">intend to select the sample population? If you are analyzin" rel="nofollow">ing texts, which texts have you chosen, and why? If you are usin" rel="nofollow">ing statistics, why is this set of statistics bein" rel="nofollow">ing used? If other data sources exist, explain" rel="nofollow">in why the data you chose is most appropriate to addressin" rel="nofollow">ing the research problem. Describe potential limitations. Are there any practical limitations that could affect your data collection? How will you attempt to control for potential confoundin" rel="nofollow">ing variables and errors? If your methodology may lead to problems you can anticipate, state this openly and show why pursuin" rel="nofollow">ing this methodology outweighs the risk of these problems croppin" rel="nofollow">ing up.