A TEST OF THE ORTEGA HYPOTHESIS IN CRIMINOLOGY |
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Authors: | GARY S. GREEN |
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Affiliation: | Gary S. Green ispresenrly an NIJgraduate research fellow at the Center for Studies in Criminology and Criminal Law at the University of Pennsylvania, studying victim reporting of crime. |
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Abstract: | Following J. Cole and S. Cole (1973), we attempt to ascertain whether important scientific work is dependent upon works of lesser quality for fruition. The “Ortega hypothesis” posits such a dependence, and we test this assertion in criminology. Using some 2700 works published in criminology between 1945 and 1972, we demonstrate that less important works (those with few citations) are rarely utilized by much more important papers (those with the highest citation counts). The Ortega hypothesis is refuted, and most criminological literature contributes nothing or little that is useful to the field. This corroborates the conditions found by the Coles to exist in physics after their test of Ortega. The data we use are from Wolfgang et al. (1978). |
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