Intervention
Pursuing Equitable Restorative Communities
School/Justice Partnership Project to research the expansion of a school-based intervention to increase school safety while reducing delinquency referrals and improving student outcomes.
Chicago Public Schools's Connect and Redirect to Respect (CRR) Program to use social media monitoring to identify and connect youth to behavioral interventions.
Promoting School Safety: A Comprehensive Emotional and Behavioral Health Model
Area 2: Reducing Crime for Girl in the Juvenile Justice System through Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships
Partner Violence Prevention for Middle School Boys: A Dyadic Web-Based Intervention
Finding Cost-Effective Ways to Reduce Truancy and Crime: An Evaluation of the Ramsey County Truancy Intervention Programs
Effective School Level Interventions to Prevent Teen Dating Violence
Preventing Revictimization in Teen Dating Relationships
Violence Prevention: Moving from Evidence to Implementation
Predictive Policing: The Role of Crime Forecasting in Law Enforcement Operations
Empirical Assessment of Domestic Radicalization
Interview with Gary Ackerman, Director for Special Projects, National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, University of Maryland
Mr. Ackerman is conducting an empirical assessment of domestic radicalization, with an emphasis on the process of radicalization. In this interview, Ackerman explains how he is using large empirical analysis and small scale life study analysis to discover which factors might cause an individual to make the leap from illegal terrorist behavior to violent terrorist behavior.
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Evaluating the Implementation of a Family-Focused Prevention Program: Effectiveness of SAFE Children
Stomp Out Stress
Shifting Boundaries: Final Report on an Experimental Evaluation of a Youth Dating Violence Prevention Program in New York City Middle Schools
Reconsidering the Project Greenlight Intervention: Why Thinking About Risk Matters
Project Greenlight's negative outcomes disappointed stakeholders and puzzled researchers. A reexamination of Greenlight's data suggests that the intensity of the program may not have been well-suited for medium- and high-risk offenders.
 
      