Criminal Law
Police Crime: The Criminal Behavior of Sworn Law Enforcement Officers
ALASKA'S BAN ON PLEA BARGAINING
Proceedings of the Harvard Law School Conference on International Cooperation in Criminal Matters
'Insider' Justice - Defense Attorneys and the Handling of Felony Cases
Impact of California Firearms Sales Laws and Dealer Regulations on the Illegal Diversion of Guns
Crime and Punishment Reconsidered - Some Comments on Blumstein's Stability of Punishment Hypothesis
Three Strikes and You're Out: Are Repeat Offender Laws Having Their Anticipated Effects?
Updating the Deterrence Doctrine
The Changing Boundaries Between Federal and Local Law Enforcement
Hearing Protectors for Use on Firing Ranges - Law Enforcement Standards Program
Stranger Homicides in Nine American Cities
Trafficking in Meaning: Law, Victims, and the State
Commensurability and Crime Prevention - Evaluating Formal Sentencing Structures and Their Rationale
Fostering Innovation Across the U.S. Criminal System: Identifying Opportunities to Improve Effectiveness, Efficiency, and Fairness
National Institute of Justice: Strengthening Science and Advancing Justice
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Funding to support the operation of the Secretariat of ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 37, Biometrics
The Mobilization Puzzle: How Individual, Group, and Situational Dynamics Produce Extremist Outcomes
The Impact of Constitutional Carry Legislation on Urban Violence, Arrests, and Police-Citizen Encounters
Tribal Justice, Tribal Court: Strengthening Tribal Justice Systems Using Restorative Approaches
State Responses to Mass Incarceration
Researchers have devoted considerable attention to mass incarceration, specifically its magnitude, costs, and collateral consequences. In the face of economic constraints, strategies to reduce correctional populations while maintaining public safety are becoming a fiscal necessity. This panel will present strategies that states have undertaken to reduce incarceration rates while balancing taxpayer costs with ensuring public safety.
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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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How Collaboration Between Researchers and Police Chiefs Can Improve the Quality of Sexual Assault Investigations: A Look at Los Angeles
Panelists discuss the application of research findings from an NIJ-sponsored study of sexual assault attrition to police practice in Los Angeles. There are three main focal points: (1) the mutual benefits of researcher/practitioner partnerships, (2) the implications of variation in police interpretation of UCR guidelines specific to clearing sexual assault (with an emphasis on cases involving nonstrangers), and (3) the content of specialized training that must be required for patrol officers and detectives who respond to and investigate sex crimes.
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Don't Jump the Shark: Understanding Deterrence and Legitimacy in the Architecture of Law Enforcement
Deterrence theory dominates the American understanding of how to regulate criminal behavior but social psychologists' research shows that people comply for reasons that have nothing to do with fear of punishment; they have to do with values, fair procedures and how people connect with one another. Professor Meares discussed the relevance of social psychologists' emerging theory to legal theory and practice and how deterrence and emerging social psychology theories intertwine.
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