Law enforcement
NIJ FY 10 Solving Cold Cases with DNA
The CIRCLE Evaluation: How Can Federal Funds Best Assist Tribal Nations?
Use of Force by Police: Overview of National and Local Data
Raytheon's Approach to a Passive mmW High-Throughput Concealed Weapons Detection Portal
Internet Crimes Against Children: An Annotated Bibliography of Major Studies
Learning From 9/11: Organizational Change in the New York City and Arlington County, Va., Police Departments
Debating DNA Collection
DNA helps law enforcement investigate and prosecute crime, but the new trend of preconviction DNA collection raises serious Fourth Amendment issues for the criminal justice community.
Director's Message - NIJ Journal Issue No. 264
The Future of Terrorism
Two experts debate the evolving nature of terrorism and its effect on law enforcement.
Crime Mapping and Hot Spots Policing
David Weisburd, recipient of the 2010 Stockholm Prize in Criminology, explains research showing that intensified police patrols in high-crime hot spots can substantially decrease crime without causing it to rise in other areas. He explains the effectiveness of policing that concentrates prevention efforts at less than 5 percent of all street corners and addresses where more than 50 percent of urban crime occurs. The evidence suggests that crimes depend not just on criminals, but also on policing in key places.
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