Legal epidemiology measures the nature and distribution of laws across jurisdictions and over time. It evaluates the implementation and impact of legal interventions on public health, and the health effects of non-health laws. It analyzes the implementation and impact of laws defining health department powers and duties. And it enables and supports the rapid diffusion of healthier laws and policies.
People working in legal epidemiology represent a diverse group of professions, disciplines, and motivations. They are lawyers, economists, criminologists, sociologists, anthropologists, psychologists, epidemiologists, as well as advocates, policymakers and legislators, doctors and medical practitioners, public health agencies, and so many others. They often approach the process of understanding the role and affects of laws and policies through their own lens, but the unifying goal among this vast field is to bring to bear the best of the scientific method and the best understanding of how law works to figure out how laws and legal practices influence public health so the best, most informed decisions can be made for policymaking.
Read more about the origins, methods and theories behind legal epidemiology
Legal Data and the Foundations of Evaluation
Before we can evaluate or analyze the implementation and impact of laws and policies, we must first identify where those laws occur, what they say, and examine how they have changed over time. We need data that capture the nuances and complexities of the text of those laws or policies from across jurisdictions, and over time.
Creating legal data for use in research requires a systematic process where researchers identify what features of laws they’d like to collect, find the legal texts where those features are codified, then identify the locations of those features within the texts, and then code those features to create the data by identifying and tracking similarities or differences among the texts.
We, and researchers around the world, create those data using scientific legal mapping methods like policy surveillance — the systematic, scientific collection and analysis of laws of public health significance. Policy surveillance creates reliable data for evaluation; creates transparent, accessible and non-partisan information about the law; tracks change over time and measures progress; diffuses innovative policy ideas; and supports workforce capacity building in public health practice. Read more about policy surveillance.