Local Police
Highlight: California University of Pennsylvania Opens Crime Mapping Center
Test of the Visibility of Toy and Replica Handgun Markings
Michigan School Introduces Naloxone Kits, Training
Crime and War: An Analysis of Non-lethal Technologies and Weapons Development
Real Policing and Public Perceptions in a Non-Urban Setting: One Size Fits One
Keeping Pace - Court Resources and Crime in Ten U.S. Cities
Social Ecology of Police Misconduct
Police Presence, Isolation, and Sexual Assault Prosecution
Shopping Malls: Are They Prepared To Prevent and Respond to Attack?
Contacts with the Police: Patterns and Meanings in a Multicultural Realm
Keeping It a "Normal" School Day
Increasing the Effectiveness and Efficiency of Rural Police Departments
Emerging Paradigm for Policing Multiethnic Societies: Glimpses From the American Experience
It's Getting Crazy Out There: Can a Civil Gang Injunction Change a Community
National Survey of Municipal Police Departments on Urban Quality of Life Initiatives
Predictions Put Into Practice: a Quasi-experimental Evaluation of Chicago's Predictive Policing Pilot
Working Together To Reduce Graffiti and Fear
TECHBeat, May 2019
Notes From the Field: Connection to Combat Terrorism
Do DOJ Intervention and Citizen Oversight Improve Police Accountability
Try Again, Fail Again, Fail Better: Lessons from Community Courts
Change doesn't come easy, particularly within an institution as large and complex as the criminal justice system. Greg Berman, Director of the Center for Court Innovation, offered lessons from several efforts to make reform stick in criminal justice settings. In particular, he focused on the development of community courts — experimental court projects that are attempting to reduce both crime and incarceration in dozens of cities across the U.S. and around the world.
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Police-on-Police Shootings and the Puzzle of Unconscious Racial Bias
Professor Christopher Stone recently completed a study of police-on-police shootings as part of a task force he chaired in New York State. He reported on his findings and recommendations, exploring the role of race in policing decisions, methods to improve training and tactics to defuse police-on-police confrontations before they become fatal, and methods to improve the investigations of such shootings.
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Opening the Black Box of NIBIN
Bill King discusses the operations of the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network (NIBIN), a program through which firearms examiners at state and local crime laboratories compare tool marks on fired bullets or cartridges found at a crime scene to digitized images of ballistic evidence in a nationwide database.
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