Books & DVDs | Current Students | Faculty & Staff | Giving | Alumni | MUM-Beijing

Maharishi University of Management

Degree programs in the arts, sciences, business, and humanities

Maharishi Effect

Decreased Crime Rate in U.S. Cities I

Crime rate decreased an average of 8.2% from 1972 to 1973 in 11 cities in which 1% or more of their population began the practice of Maharishi's Transcendental Meditation program by 1972. In contrast, crime rate increased an average of 8.3% in 11 matched control cities.

Reference: Borland & Landrith, 1976.


Population influenced: 11 U.S. cities with population between 25,000 and 100,000, compared to matched control cities.

Coherence group: More than 1% of the population instructed in the TM program by 1972.

Dependent variables: Rate of total Part 1 crimes from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).

Experimental design: Analysis of covariance comparison with 11 control cities matched for population, college population, and geographic region, change from 1972 to 1973.

Results: An 8.2% decrease in 1% cities, an 8.3% increase in control cities (p<.001). The 1% cities represented all sections of the nation. Increased crime in the control cities was typical of the nationwide trend.

Conclusions: Decreased crime in the 1% cities could not be attributed to year, population, region, or initial crime rate. Evidence supports a phase transition model of increased coherence in society.

Reference: Borland, C. & Landrith, G., III. (1976). Improved quality of city life through the Transcendental Meditation program: Decreased crime rate. In D.W. Orme-Johnson & J.T. Farrow (Eds.), Scientific Research on the Transcendental Meditation Program: Collected Papers (Vol. 1, pp. 639-648). Rheinweiler, W. Germany: Maharishi European Research University Press.

back to top

The University is accredited by The Higher Learning Commission • www.ncahlc.org
Maharishi University of Management • Fairfield, Iowa 52557 • (641) 472-7000
Office of Admissions: (800) 369-6480 or (641) 472-1110
Copyright and Service Mark NoticeConsumer InformationContact the webmaster