One
area where social concerns intersect with math and statistics
is investigating whether capital punishment in the United States
prevents murders through "deterrence." I became interested in
this problem when the death-penalty issue arose in Vermont back
around 1975. It became a hot topic in New Hampshire in 1998 and
again in 2000, while for the nation as a whole the log jam around
this issue may be breaking at last. Here is a paper summarizing
the evidence about deterrence which I prepared back then as testimony
for the New Hampshire and Vermont legislatures. (Please be patient
while the reader loads.) .
Another
important area for applied statistics is checking the results
and accuracy of elections. I wrote an article jointly with my
friend Arlene Ash (see the last section of this site) about one
election where vote counting went disasterously wrong; our paper
appeared in the Spring 2008 issue of Chance magazine,
published by the American Statistical Association. You can read
it online; go here
and then click just below "Featured in this issue."
Since
1985 one of my main interests and concerns has been Central America
and what the United States was doing there. People at the American
Friends Service Committee asked me to study the inroads of Communism
and the USSR in the region and the dangers, if any, which they
posed to this country. One result was a short book published in
1988 analyzing those alleged threats and comparing the reality
and rhetoric of U.S. policy. I also spent time in Costa Rica and
wrote about the U.S. impact on that beautiful country.
For nearly a decade my main project was to study the life of Enrique
Alvarez Córdova, a remarkable man from El Salvador who
gave his life for the people of his country. A short article about
Enrique is in this section, along with two photos, a chronology
and some appreciative quotes from Salvadoran writers. go
there
My full length biography of Enrique Alvarez was published by McFarland
in April 2006, and a flyer with a picture of the book is on the
publisher's website here; a
review of the book by Prof. Jack Spence is here. I am hoping for a
Spanish edition before too long, since one purpose of the book
is to help the people of El Salvador remember and appreciate one
of their country's heroes.
My El Salvador pages also include a few non-fiction "short stories";
perhaps the most intriguing of these is
about the mysterious don Justo Armas who may, or may not, have
had some surprising family onnections.
I would be happy to correspond with anyone about Enrique Alvarez or anything else related
to El Salvador.
Of course life
is also about wonderful people. These pages introduce some of
the significant others who have helped me stay (largely) sane
and happy, and who help make it all worth while. My love and gratitude
go to the friends and family whose photos are here and also to
those not pictured on this site. New on this site in 2005: a pair
of small twins, plus my daughter Noelle and her husband Robert
Bushell. go
there
.