September 2016 | Open Philanthropy                    @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/system/system.base.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/system/system.menus.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/system/system.messages.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/system/system.theme.css?qxfjis");   @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/jquery_update/replace/ui/themes/base/minified/jquery.ui.core.min.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/jquery_update/replace/ui/themes/base/minified/jquery.ui.theme.min.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/jquery_update/replace/ui/themes/base/minified/jquery.ui.accordion.min.css?qxfjis");   @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/comment_notify/comment_notify.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/comment/comment.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/field/theme/field.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/footnotes/footnotes.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/custom/grants_summary/grants_summary.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/node/node.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/search/search.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/modules/user/user.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/views/css/views.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/caption_filter/caption-filter.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/ckeditor/css/ckeditor.css?qxfjis");   @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/ctools/css/ctools.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/typogrify/typogrify.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/modules/contrib/content_type_extras/css/content_type_extras.css?qxfjis");   @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/normalize.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/op-fonts.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/html.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/meanmenu.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/global.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/pages/pages.css?qxfjis"); @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/pages/custom.css?qxfjis");   @import url("https://web.archive.org./web/20211018150637cs_/https://www.openphilanthropy.org/sites/all/themes/op_basic/styles/css/global/admin.css?qxfjis");                                      Jump to Navigation            Research & IdeasCause Selection Notable Lessons Cause Reports Conversations History of Philanthropy  Focus AreasU.S. Policy Criminal Justice Reform Farm Animal Welfare Macroeconomic Stabilization Policy Immigration Policy Land Use Reform Global Catastrophic Risks Biosecurity and Pandemic Preparedness Potential Risks from Advanced Artificial Intelligence Scientific Research Global Health & Development Other areas  GivingGrants Database Current Priorities Guide for Grant Seekers Grantmaking Stages  About UsWho We Are Vision & Values Openness Progress to Date Team Press Kit  Blog Get InvolvedContact Us Stay Updated Working at Open Phil          Search form  Search                     Home / Blog / Archive  September 2016              Maybe the Murder Rate Levelled Off This Year?   by David Roodman Published September 26, 2016       In February, out of concern that the US is experiencing a new crime wave, I blogged about a data set Open Phil assembled on crime in major American cities. In comparison with the FBI’s widely cited national totals, our data covered far less territory—18 cities for which we found daily incident data—but did better in the time dimension, with higher resolution and more up-to-date counts. We could compute daily totals, and from data sets that for many cities are almost literally up-to-the-minute.

 Some places that have recently made national crime news also appear in our data, including Baltimore, Chicago, St. Louis, and Washington, DC. Within our geographic scope, we gain a better view into the latest trends than we can get from the FBI’s annual totals, which appear with a long lag.

 Indeed the FBI will probably release its 2015 crime totals in the next few days, which may stoke discussion about crime in the US. [Update: it just did].

 In this post, I update all the graphs presented in the earlier one, which I suggest you read first. These updates generate predictions about what the FBI will announce, and perhaps point to one trend that it won’t yet discern.

 With 8 more months of data on these 18 cities, plus the addition of New York for 2006–15, the main updates on per-capita crime rates are:

  On a population-weighted basis, the hints in the old post of decline at the end of 2015, in violent crime in general and homicide in particular, have faded—or at least have been pushed forward in time. Instead, after the homicide rise of late 2014 and 2015—which indeed was one of the largest increases in modern times—the homicide trend has flattened. Violent crime rose slowly, as it has since mid-2014. It remains low historically, down roughly a third since 2001. Property crime (burglary, theft, arson) continues to sink like a stone.  If our data capture national trends (which is far from certain), then the FBI will soon report that the 2015 homicide rate rose a lot from 2014, that violent crime rose a little bit, that property crime fell, and that total crime, which is dominated in sheer quantity by property crime, also fell. [Update: these look right.]

 Here are the Open Phil graphs, updated through a few weeks ago and starting with homicide (data and code here):

  [node:read-more:link]

      Criminal Justice Reform       David Roodman's blog Add new comment          September 2016 Open Thread   by Holden Karnofsky Published September 20, 2016       Our goal is to give blog readers and followers of the Open Philanthropy Project an opportunity to publicly raise comments or questions about the Open Philanthropy Project or related topics (in the comments section below). As always, you’re also welcome to email us at [email protected] if there’s feedback or questions you’d prefer to discuss privately. We’ll try to respond promptly to questions or comments.

 You can see our previous open thread here. [node:read-more:link]

      Open Threads       Holden Karnofsky's blog 7 comments Add new comment          Update on How We’re Thinking about Openness and Information Sharing   by Holden Karnofsky Published September 16, 2016       One of our core values is sharing what we’re learning. We envision a world in which philanthropists increasingly discuss their research, reasoning, results and mistakes publicly to help each other learn more quickly and serve others more effectively. 

 However, we think there has been confusion - including in our own heads - between the above idea and a related one: the idea that philanthropists should share and explain their thinking near-comprehensively so that the reasoning behind every decision can be understood and critiqued. 

 Such near-comprehensive information sharing is an appropriate goal for GiveWell, which exists primarily to make recommendations to the public, and emphasizes the transparency of these recommendations as a key reason to follow them. (See GiveWell’s approach to transparency.) [node:read-more:link]

      Open Philanthropy Project Updates       Holden Karnofsky's blog 9 comments Add new comment          Three Key Issues I’ve Changed My Mind About   by Holden Karnofsky Published September 06, 2016       Philanthropy - especially hits-based philanthropy - is driven by a large number of judgment calls. At the Open Philanthropy Project, we’ve explicitly designed our process to put major weight on the views of individual leaders and program officers in decisions about the strategies we pursue, causes we prioritize, and grants we ultimately make. As such, we think it’s helpful for individual staff members to discuss major ways in which our personal thinking has changed, not only about particular causes and grants, but also about our background worldviews. [node:read-more:link]

        Holden Karnofsky's blog 8 comments Add new comment                 Stay Updated   Email me new blog posts

  Blog RSS feed

  More information     Recent blog posts        New Roles in Global Health and Wellbeing    Report on Whether AI Could Drive Explosive Economic Growth    Open Philanthropy’s New Co-CEO    New Staff in Operations, Programs, and Research (2021)    Our Progress in 2020 and Plans for 2021        Archives    All posts

   2021 June 2021    June 2021    June 2021    June 2021    June 2021   April 2021    April 2021   March 2021    March 2021   January 2021    January 2021  2020 December 2020    December 2020    December 2020   November 2020    November 2020   September 2020    September 2020   June 2020    June 2020   May 2020    May 2020    May 2020   March 2020    March 2020  2019 December 2019    December 2019    December 2019   November 2019    November 2019   October 2019    October 2019   August 2019    August 2019    August 2019   July 2019    July 2019   June 2019    June 2019   April 2019    April 2019    April 2019    April 2019   March 2019    March 2019   February 2019    February 2019  2018 December 2018    December 2018    December 2018    December 2018   October 2018    October 2018   September 2018    September 2018   May 2018    May 2018   April 2018    April 2018   March 2018    March 2018    March 2018    March 2018   February 2018    February 2018    February 2018   January 2018    January 2018    January 2018    January 2018  2017 December 2017    December 2017    December 2017    December 2017   November 2017    November 2017   October 2017    October 2017   September 2017    September 2017    September 2017    September 2017    September 2017    September 2017   June 2017    June 2017    June 2017    June 2017    June 2017   April 2017    April 2017    April 2017   March 2017    March 2017    March 2017    March 2017   February 2017    February 2017    February 2017  2016 December 2016    December 2016    December 2016    December 2016   October 2016    October 2016   September 2016    September 2016    September 2016    September 2016    September 2016   July 2016    July 2016   June 2016    June 2016    June 2016   May 2016    May 2016    May 2016    May 2016   April 2016    April 2016    April 2016   March 2016    March 2016    March 2016   February 2016    February 2016    February 2016    February 2016    February 2016  2015 December 2015    December 2015   November 2015    November 2015   October 2015    October 2015   September 2015    September 2015    September 2015    September 2015    September 2015    September 2015   August 2015    August 2015    August 2015    August 2015   July 2015    July 2015    July 2015    July 2015    July 2015    July 2015   June 2015    June 2015    June 2015    June 2015   May 2015    May 2015    May 2015    May 2015   April 2015    April 2015    April 2015    April 2015    April 2015    April 2015   March 2015    March 2015    March 2015    March 2015    March 2015   February 2015    February 2015    February 2015    February 2015  2014 October 2014    October 2014    October 2014   September 2014    September 2014    September 2014   August 2014    August 2014   July 2014    July 2014    July 2014   June 2014    June 2014   May 2014    May 2014    May 2014    May 2014    May 2014   April 2014    April 2014    April 2014   March 2014    March 2014    March 2014   January 2014    January 2014    January 2014  2013 December 2013    December 2013   November 2013    November 2013    November 2013   October 2013    October 2013    October 2013    October 2013    October 2013   September 2013    September 2013   July 2013    July 2013    July 2013    July 2013   June 2013    June 2013    June 2013   May 2013    May 2013    May 2013   April 2013    April 2013    April 2013    April 2013   March 2013    March 2013   February 2013    February 2013  2012 September 2012    September 2012    September 2012   July 2012    July 2012   June 2012    June 2012    June 2012    June 2012   May 2012    May 2012    May 2012    May 2012   March 2012    March 2012   February 2012    February 2012    February 2012    February 2012   January 2012    January 2012  2011 October 2011    October 2011   September 2011    September 2011    September 2011    September 2011                 contact us jobs press kit    facebook twitter rss  © Open Philanthropy. Except as otherwise noted, this work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License. Some images may be copyrighted by others and not licensed for re-use: see image captions or footnotes. Privacy policy         try { clicky.init(100914494); }catch(e){}