High crime areas
Creating Base Maps and Layer Files for Cartographic Consistency
Pulling Levers: Chronic Offenders, High-Crime Settings, and a Theory of Prevention
Police Education, Experience, and the Use of Force
Using Gunshot Detection Technology in High-Crime Areas
Adolescent Violence: A View From the Street
Implementing DDACTS in Baltimore County: Using Geographic Incident Patterns to Deploy Enforcement
Using Traffic Barriers to "Design Out" Crime: A Program Evaluation of LADP's Operation Cul-de-Sac
Keeping an Eye on Crime
Effects of Directed Patrol and Self-Initiated Enforcement on Firearm Violence: A Randomized Controlled Study of Hot Spot Policing
High Crime Taverns: A RECAP (Repeat Call Address Policing) Project in Problem-Oriented Policing
Traffic Safety Initiative Modernizes Resource Deployment in Lafourche Parish
General Deterrent Effects of Police Patrol in Crime "Hot Spots": A Randomized, Controlled Trial
Within Earshot
Evidence-Based Practices and Strategies: Risk Terrain Modeling
Captain Baughman of the Kansas City (MO) Police Department answers the question “What is risk terrain modeling?” and explains how it differs from crime mapping, what resources his agency deploys at high risk areas, and the results he has seen form using risk terrain models.
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Infusing Community Policing Strategies into Hot Spots Policing Practices: The Impacts on Police-Community Relations in a Mid-Sized City
Real-Time Crime Forecasting Challenge Webinar
This webinar will offer a brief overview of the National Institute of Justice and the data science needs of the criminal justice field. In addition, it will provide details about the Crime Forecasting Challenge, including who can submit, how to retrieve datasets, and the submission categories. The overall goal of the Crime Forecasting Challenge is to harness recent advances in data science to drive innovation in algorithms that advance place-based crime forecasting.
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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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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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Crime Mapping and Hot Spots Policing - NIJ Research for the Real World Seminar
Chicago Ceasefire - Postplenary Session at the 2009 NIJ Conference
What Works in Reentry
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