Municipal Police
Research on the Impact of Technology on Policing Strategies
A Multi-Site Assessment of Police Consolidation
FY 2013 DNA Backlog Reduction Program - St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department Crime Laboratory
FY2013 Forensic DNA Backlog Reduction Program - City of Houston Police Department
Assessing the Validity and Reliability of National Data on Citizen Complaints about Police Use of Force
Practitioner Centric Video Analytics
FY2013 Forensic DNA Backlog Reduction Program - Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department
Turnover Among Alaska Village Public Safety Officers: An Examination of the Factors Associated With Attrition
From Problem Solving to Crime Suppression to Community Mobilization: An Evaluation of the St. Louis Consent-to-Search Program
Survey and Evaluation of Online Crime Mapping Companies
FY12 Postconviction New York City Joint Working Group on Postconviction DNA-Testing
Police Workforce Structures: Cohorts, the Economy, and Organizational Performance
Evaluating a Researcher-Practitioner Partnership and Field Experiment
The MPD seeks to review, prioritize, examine and evaluate its existing cold cases in an effort to identify physical evidence with the potential to yield DNA that can be submitted for testing.
FY2012 Forensic DNA Backlog Reduction Program - Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department
City of Salem Police Department Crime Lab Improvements
FY2012 Forensic DNA Backlog Reduction Program-DC Metropolitan Police Department
FY12 DNA Backlog Reduction Program- City of Oaland Police Department
Understanding the Intelligence Practices of State, Local, and Tribal Law Enforcement Agencies
Protecting our Protectors: Using Science to Improve Officer Safety and Wellness
Each year, 100-200 law enforcement officers die in the line of duty. Last year, 177 lost their lives — a 16-percent increase from 2010. As Attorney General Eric Holder noted, this is a devastating and unacceptable trend. NIJ has developed a robust research portfolio to improve officer safety and wellness and, ultimately, save lives. This panel discussed some of NIJ's most promising work to reduce shooting and traffic-related fatalities — consistently the leading causes of officer line-of-duty deaths — and improve officer wellness, which is inextricably linked with officer safety.
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