Assault
Cybersecurity and Safety Challenges in Autonomous Vehicles: Threats Identification and Countermeasures Development
The Impact of Forensic Evidence on Arrest and Prosecution
Can We Predict Long-term Community Crime Problems? The Estimation of Ecological Continuity to Model Risk Heterogeneity
Five Things About Violence Against American Indian and Alaska Native Men and Women
Characterization of Weapons used in Stab/Slash Attacks
Building Healthy Teen Relationships: An Evaluation of the Fourth R Curriculum with Middle School Students in the Bronx
Final Report and Findings of the Safe School Initiative: Implications for the Prevention of School Attacks in the United States, 2004
Space-time study of youth and school violence
Impact of Immigration on Ethnic-Specific Violence
Documentation of Resident to Resident Elder Mistreatment in Residential Care Facilities
Enhancing Knowledge of Dispute-Related Violence
Protecting our Protectors: Using Science to Improve Officer Safety and Wellness
Each year, 100-200 law enforcement officers die in the line of duty. Last year, 177 lost their lives — a 16-percent increase from 2010. As Attorney General Eric Holder noted, this is a devastating and unacceptable trend. NIJ has developed a robust research portfolio to improve officer safety and wellness and, ultimately, save lives. This panel discussed some of NIJ's most promising work to reduce shooting and traffic-related fatalities — consistently the leading causes of officer line-of-duty deaths — and improve officer wellness, which is inextricably linked with officer safety.
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