Intimate partner homicide
UAA Research on Violence Against Women
Tribal Crime, Justice, and Safety, Part 2
Stacy Lee Reynolds and Christine (Tina) Crossland continue their discussion of tribal crime, justice, and safety, including how Native American persons experience crime victimization at higher rates than non-Native people and the jurisdictional complexities in responding to tribal crime, justice, and safety. Read the transcript.
Listen to the first half of Stacy and Tina’s discussion.
Reading and Resources from NIJ
Tribal-Researcher Capacity Building Grants
Domestic Violence and Mass Shootings: A Review of Current Academic Literature
The Association between Homicide Risk and Intimate Partner Violence Arrest
Firearm Removal, Judicial Decision-Making, and Domestic Violence Protection Orders
Reducing Intimate Partner Homicides: The Effects of Federally-Funded Shelter Services Availability in California
Comparison of U.S. and Canadian Findings on Uxoricide Risk for Women with Children Sired by Previous Partners
Risk Factors for Death or Life-Threatening Injury for Abused Women in Chicago (From Violence Against Women and Family Violence: Developments in Research, Practice, and Policy, 2004, Bonnie Fisher, ed. -- See NCJ-199701)
Chicago Women's Health Risk Study, June 2000 (Part I and II)
Use of the Justice System Prior to Intimate Partner Femicide
Why Is the United States the Most Homicidal Nation in the Affluent World?