Jails
Biometrics: Applying an Emerging Technology to Jails
Exploring Racial Disparities in the Brief Jail Mental Health Screen
Impact of Pretrial Preventive Detention
CCTV in Jail Housing - An Evaluation of Technology-Enhanced Supervision
Prisons as Self-Regulating Systems - A Comparison of Historical Patterns in California for Male and Female Offenders
Challenges Incarcerated Women Face as They Return to Their Communities: Findings From Life History Interviews
Project NITRO--National Inmate Telephone Research Operations: Draft Final Technical Report
Making Jails Productive
The Governance of Corrections: Implications of the Changing Interface of Courts and Corrections
Evaluating Medicaid Access for Halfway House Residents: A Research Partnership With the Connecticut Department of Correction
TECHBeat, October 2018
Sentinel Events Approach to Jail Suicide and Self-Harm
Guidelines for Conducting Meaningful Research in Local Jails
Options for Conducting Randomized Controlled Trials With Inmates in Local Jails
NIJ-Funded Research Examines What Works for Successful Reentry
Expanding Mental Health Diversion Opportunities: A Prospective Evaluation of the Los Angeles County Intake Booking Diversion Program
Crime and Victimization on the US-Mexico Border: A Comparison of Legal Residents, Illegal Residents and Native-Born Citizens
Illegal Immigration, Immigration Enforcement Policies, and American CitizensÂ’ Victimization Risk
Improving Identification, Prevalence Estimation, and Earlier Intervention for Victims of Labor and Sex Trafficking
NIJ Journal Issue No. 262
Identifying At-Risk Officers: Can It Be Done in Corrections?
Changing the Behavior of Drug-Involved Offenders: Supervision That Works
A small number of those who commit crimes are heavily involved in drugs commit a large portion of the crime in this country. An evaluation of a "smart supervision" effort in Hawaii that uses swift and certain sanctioning showed that individuals committing crimes who are heavily involved in drug use can indeed change their behavior when the supervision is properly implemented.
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Reforming New Orleans' Criminal Justice System: The Role of Data and Research
With its criminal justice system in disarray following Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans invited the Vera Institute of Justice to examine the city's court and jail operations. For five years, Vera has been tracking arrest-to-first-appearance time, custodial arrests versus summonses, the granting of pretrial release, and many other decision-making points. Based on analysis of these data, Vera is making policy recommendations to assist with the implementation of new procedures and to ensure performance monitoring.