Crime rate
Including Tourists in Crime Rate Calculations for New Casino Jurisdictions: What Difference Does It Make?
Assessing the Relationship Between Police-Community Coproduction and Neighborhood-Level Social Capital
Strain and Violence: Testing a General Strain Theory Model of Community Violence
Geospatial Technology Helps East Orange Crack Down on Crime
Comprehensive Community Based Information System to Reduce Youth and Gang Violence in Los Angeles County and Beyond
Preventing Neighborhood Crime: Geography Matters
Effects of Marijuana Legalization on Law Enforcement and Crime: Executive Summary
Information Sharing and the Role of Sex Offender Registration and Notification, Final Technical Report
Information Sharing and the Role of Sex Offender Registration and Notification, Executive Report
Micro And Macro-Level Assessment Of Juvenile Justice Placement Reform In Ohio: Final Technical Report
Easily Overstated: Estimating the Relationship Between State Justice Policy Environments and Falling Rates of Youth Confinement
Evaluation of Gunshot Detection Technology to Aid in the Reduction of Firearms Violence
NIJ LEADS Program Increases Research Capabilities of Law Enforcement Officers
Undocumented Immigration, Crime, and Recidivism
Crime and Victimization on the US-Mexico Border: A Comparison of Legal Residents, Illegal Residents and Native-Born Citizens
New Directions in Research on Immigration and Crime
Illegal Immigration, Immigration Enforcement Policies, and American CitizensÂ’ Victimization Risk
Neighborhood Crime Survey: An Examination of the Relationship Between Immigration and Victimization
Why Is the United States the Most Homicidal Nation in the Affluent World?
Ohio State University Since World War II, the homicide rate in the U.S. has been three to ten times higher than in Canada, Western Europe, and Japan. This, however, has not always been the case. What caused the dramatic change? Dr. Roth discussed how and why rates of different kinds of homicide have varied across time and space over the past 450 years, including an examination of the murder of children by parents or caregivers, intimate partner violence, and homicides among unrelated adults.
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Violent Repeat Victimization: Prospects and Challenges for Research and Practice
Research tells us that a relatively small fraction of individuals experience a large proportion of violent victimizations. Thus, focusing on reducing repeat victimization might have a large impact on total rates of violence. However, research also tells us that most violent crime victims do not experience more than one incident during a six-month or one-year time period. As a result, special policies to prevent repeat violence may not be cost-effective for most victims.
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