Municipal/City
Neighborhood Advantage, Relative Status, and Violence Among Foreign-Born Adolescents
Treatment Modality, Failure, and Re-Arrest: A Test of the Risk Principle With Substance-Abusing Criminal Defendants
Shelving Justice: The Discovery of Thousands of Untested Rape Kits in Detroit
Trust Thy Crooked Neighbor: Multiplexity in Chicago Organized Crime Networks
Increased Death Rates of Domestic Violence Victims From Arresting vs. Warning Suspects in the Milwaukee Domestic Violence Experiment (MilDVE)
Financial Implications of Merging Proactive CCTV Monitoring and Directed Police Patrol: a Cost-benefit Analysis
Examining the Sustainability of Pattern or Practice Police Misconduct Reform
Moving From Efficacy to Effectiveness: Implementing the Drug Market Intervention Across Multiple Sites
Measurement of Repeat Effects in Chicago's Criminal Social Network
Arlington Outreach Initiative Treats Overdoses, Increases Community Trust
Assessing the Impact of Home Foreclosures in Charlotte Neighborhoods
Place-Based Correlates of Motor Vehicle Theft and Recovery: Measuring Spatial Influence Across Neighbourhood Context
Assessing the Long-Term Impact of Focused Deterrence in New Orleans: A Documentation of Changes in Homicides and Firearm Recoveries
Discipline in Context: Suspension, Climate, and PBIS in the School District of Philadelphia
From the Academy to Retirement: A Journey Through the Policing Lifecycle
Professor Rosenbaum and a panel of colleagues discuss a study to demonstrate the feasibility of creating a foundation from which to launch studies about multiple aspects of policing using standardized definitions and measurement tools. Their goal is to advance knowledge about policing and translate data into evidence-based best practices that improve training, supervision and accountability systems. The effort is expected to produce a better understanding of what motivates police officers and makes them healthier, happier and more effective.
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The State of the Police Field: A New Professionalism in Policing?
Panelists debate the premise of a Harvard Executive Session working paper that suggests police organizations are striving for a "new" professionalism. Leaders are endeavoring for stricter standards of efficiency and conduct, while also increasing their legitimacy to the public and encouraging innovation. Is this new? Will this idea lead to prematurely discarding community policing as a guiding philosophy?
Special Technical Committees: How They Are Changing NIJ's Standards Development Process
NIJ has established a new standards development process based on Special Technical Committees whose members include practitioners, scientists, researchers, subject matter experts, staff of test laboratories and major criminal justice stakeholder organizations, and representatives knowledgeable in standards development and conformity assessment. The members collaborate to develop the standard and ensure that practitioner needs are addressed.