Crime patterns
California: A Decade of Decarceration
Self-exciting Point Processes With Spatial Covariates: Modelling the Dynamics of Crime
Understanding the spatial distribution of crime based on its related variables using geospatial discriminative patterns
Crime forecasting using spatio-temporal pattern with ensemble learning
Machine Learning Methods for Predicting Global and Local Crime in an Urban Area
Forensic GIS
Physical Boundaries and City Boundaries: Consequences for Crime Patterns on Street Segments?
An exploratory network analysis of hot people and places
Real-Time Sample-Mining and Data-Mining Approaches for the Discovery of Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS)
Crime and Justice: A Review of Research, Volume 30
Organized Crime in the United States: A Review of the Public Record
Chemical Analysis of Firearm Discharge Residues Using Laser Induced Breakdown Spectroscopy
Understanding Socio-environmental and Physical Risk Factors Influencing Firearm Violence
The Nature, Trends, Correlates, and Prevention of Mass Public Shootings in America, 1976-2018
Profiles of individual radicalization in the United States: Preliminary findings
Using Social Media To Measure Temporal Ambient Population: Does It Help Explain Local Crime Rates?
Distance Analysis I and II (CrimeStat IV: A Spatial Statistics Program for the Analysis of Crime Incident Locations, Version 4.0)
Spatial Autocorrelation Statistics (CrimeStat IV: A Spatial Statistics Program for the Analysis of Crime Incident Locations, Version 4.0)
Opioids, Race, Context, and Journeys to Crime: Analyzing Black-White Differences in Travel Associated With Opioid Possession Offenses
Multilevel Evaluation of Project Safe Neighborhoods
Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN) is a DOJ-sponsored initiative to reduce violent crime, particularly gun crime, by fostering cooperation by criminal justice agencies and local partners to develop and implement strategic approaches.
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NIJ-Funded Research on Firearms Violence in Urban Cities Advancing Scientific Evidence to Inform Practice
In this full thematic panel, renowned experts will present a series of papers summarizing the newest findings of NIJ-funded research projects on criminal offenses with firearms in urban areas. Researchers used various criminological and other theories, including routine activity theory, socio-ecological and socio-environmental perspectives, and advanced mixed-study methods, including surveys and spatio-temporal designs, to produce scientific evidence to inform practice.
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Desistance From Crime: Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice
Most scholars would agree that desistance from crime – the process of ceasing engagement in criminal activities – is normative. However, there is variability in the literature regarding the definition and measurement of desistance, the signals of desistance, the age at which desistance begins, and the underlying mechanisms that lead to desistance. Even with considerable advances in the theoretical understanding of desistance from crime, there remain critical gaps between research and the application of that research to practice.
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