Community corrections
Evaluating the Impact of Probation and Parole Home Visits
Evaluating the Effects of Realignment Practices on Recidivism Outcomes
How Women and Front-Line Workers Manage the Bureaucratic Process of Prisoner Reentry
Establishing a National Criminal Justice Technology Research, Test and Evaluation Center
Access to Transportation and Outcomes for Women on Probation and Parole
Data Resources Program 2013: Funding for Analysis of Existing Data Community Corrections Patterns: State Level Composition of Probation and Parole, 1975-2010
Completion of the Development of the Offender Tracking Standard
NIJ Evaluations of the Second Chance Act
History of GPS Monitoring Policies in California
Evaluating A Presumptive Drug Testing Technology in Community Corrections Settings
Community Corrections: An Executive Session on the Future of Correctional Policy
The Contextual Determinants and Implications of Back-end Sentencing
SOTIPS Implementation Evaluation Project
Evaluation of the FY2011 Bureau of Justice Assistance Second Chance Act Adult Offender Reentry Demonstration Projects (Focus Area 2)
Screening for Poly-Victimization in Predicting a Range of Behavioral and Justice-Related Outcomes in Justice-Referred Youths Screened at Intake
The Effect of Collateral Consequence Laws on State Rates of Returns to Prison
Assessing the Effectiveness of Four Juvenile Justice Interventions on Adult Criminal Justice and Child Welfare Outcomes
Research on District Attorneys'' Pretrial Diversion Programs: A Proposal for a Comprehensive Multi-Method Study
A New Role for Technology: The Impact of Video Visitation on Corrections Staff, Prisoners, and their Families
How Justice System Realign in California: The Policies and Systematic Effects of Prison Downsizing
Monitoring High-Risk Sex Offenders With GPS Technology: An Evaluation of the California Supervision Program, Final Report
Using Random Forest Risk Prediction in the Philadelphia Probation Department
Watch two experts talk about developing a computerized system that successfully predicts — with a high degree of accuracy — which probationers are likely to violently reoffend within two years of returning to the community.
Drs. Barnes and Hyatt teamed up with the Philadelphia Adult Probation & Parole Department in an NIJ-funded project. Here they discuss:
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