Homicide
Change and Continuity in Crime in Rural America
The Impact of State-Level Firearms Laws on Homicide Rates by Race/Ethnicity
Notes From the Field: Expanding the DNA Database to Solve Cold Cases
Disrupting Gun Transfers: Final Summary Overview for National Institute of Justice
Firearm Involvement in Delinquent Youth and Collateral Consequences in Young Adulthood: A Prospective Longitudinal Study
Assessing the Long-Term Impact of Focused Deterrence in New Orleans: A Documentation of Changes in Homicides and Firearm Recoveries
Epidemiology of Crime Guns: Summary
Finding the Region of Origin of Blood Spatters in Complex Situations: Novel Physics-Based Methods and Tools
Just Science: DNA: Just Investigative Genetic Genealogy
The Impact of Constitutional Carry Legislation on Urban Violence, Arrests, and Police-Citizen Encounters
A Descriptive Analysis of Missing and Murdered Native Women and Children in Nebraska, Barriers to Reporting and Investigation, and Recommendations for Improving Access to Justice
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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