Intimate partner violence
Explaining the IPV Arrest Decision: Incident, Agency, and Community Factors
Gender-Based Violence and American Indian and Alaska Native Communities
Economic Justice for Survivors of Intimate Partner Violence
The Impact of Brain Injury Services in Domestic Violence Cases: A Randomized Control Trial
Gender-Based Violence and the Latino Community
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.
Development of a New Measure of Adolescent Dating Aggression: National Norms with a Focus on Marginalized Youth
Tribal Crime, Justice, and Safety (Part 1)
Research indicates that Native American persons experience crime victimization at higher rates than non-Native people. Furthermore, the unique position of American Indian and Alaska Native tribes as both sovereign nations and domestic dependents of the U.S. creates jurisdictional complexities in responding to crime, justice, and safety. Senior social and behavioral scientist Christine (Tina) Crossland discusses NIJ’s research on these topics, especially on the prevention of violence towards American Indians and Alaska Natives. Communications Assistant Stacy Lee Reynolds hosts.