Evidence-based practices
Bridging the Research/Practice Gap: Street-Level Decision Making and Historical Influences Related to Evidence-Based Practices in Adult Probation
Community Corrections in Context: A Multi-Method Evaluation of Risk Responsive and Neighborhood-Oriented Probation Models in New York City
Effect of Prison-Based Alcohol Treatment: A Multi-Site Process and Outcome Evaluation
Data-Driven Crime Prevention: New Tools for Community Involvement and Crime Control
What Works in Offender Supervision
From the Academy to Retirement: A Journey Through the Policing Lifecycle
Healthy Officers Are Safer Officers: The Nexus Between Performance & Health
FY 2011 Second Chance Act Adult Offender Reentry Demonstration Projects: Evaluability Assessment of the New Haven (CT) Reentry Initiative
Evidence-Based Policy and Practice: The Role of the State in Advancing Criminal Justice Research, Findings from the Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships Study (RPPS)
Violence Prevention: Moving from Evidence to Implementation
Long-Term Study on the Impacts of Training and Peer Support on Relationship Quality and Mentee Outcomes
Youth Initiated Mentoring:Investigating an innovative approach to mentoring at-risk youth
Group Mentoring for Resilience: Increasing Positive Development and Reducing Involvement in the Juvenile Justice System
Healthy Officers Are Safer Officers: The Nexus Between Performance & Health
Evaluation of the FY2011 Bureau of Justice Assistance Second Chance Act Adult Offender Reentry Demonstration Projects (Focus Area 2)
Game Change: How Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships Are Redefining How We Study Crime
Opening Plenary Panel
When researchers and practitioners work side by side, they can maximize their problem-solving abilities. The research partner can focus on the data and the science; the practitioner can focus on interpreting the findings and applying them in the field. In the plenary panel, panelists described the benefits, challenges and pitfalls of researcher-practitioner partnerships with a focus on the financial benefits to the practitioner.
Moderator: John H. Laub, Director, National Institute of Justice
Panelists:
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