Adult correctional facilities
Reentry Discussion: Overcoming Challenges When Leaving Incarceration
Consequences of a Prison Record for Employment: How Do Race, Ethnicity & Gender Factor In?
Improving Access to Services for Female Offenders Returning to the Community
Going Home (or Not): How Residential Change Might Help Former Offenders Stay Out of Prison - NIJ Research for the Real World Seminar
Getting Ready Program - Remaking Prison Life to Prepare Inmates for Reentry - Interview at the National Institute of Justice
Alternative Sentencing Policies for Drug Offenders - Panel at the 2009 NIJ Conference
NIJ Journal Issue No. 241
NIJ Journal Issue No. 239
NIJ Journal Issue No. 263
NIJ Journal Issue No. 261
NIJ Journal Issue No. 262
NIJ Journal Issue No. 273
NIJ Journal Issue No. 269
Harnessing the Power of Technology in Institutional Corrections
Reflections on Colorado's Administrative Segregation Study
Alternative Sentencing Policies for Drug Offenders
The panel presentations from the 2009 NIJ Conference are based on an NIJ-sponsored evaluation of the effectiveness of Kansas Senate Bill 123, which mandates community-based drug abuse treatment for drug possession by nonviolent offenders in lieu of prison.
Prosecuting Cases of Elder Abuse
This panel will feature NIJ-funded research that has direct, practical implications for the prosecution of elder abuse cases. Panelists will present findings from a study of prosecutors in three states that examined the factors that influenced their decisions to prosecute elder financial abuse cases. The panel will also provide the results from an evaluation of five innovative court-based models that target perpetrators of elder abuse.
Stakeholder Statements Submitted in Response to NIJs First Step Act Listening Sessions
First Step Act: Best Practices for Academic and Vocational Education for Offenders
Less Is More: How Reducing Probation Populations Can Improve Outcomes
Opioid Crisis: Two Chiefs Discuss the Challenges, Changes, and Results in Their Jurisdictions
Dayton (Ohio) Police Chief Richard Biehl and Burlington (Vermont) Police Chief Brandon del Pozo discuss the challenges of introducing institutional change across all of the agencies necessary to address the opioid crisis. They also explain the changes that they have made in their jurisdictions and the outcomes of those changes.
See the YouTube Terms of Service and Google Privacy Policy