Offenses
An empirical analysis of the scope and scale of organized crime''s involvement in human trafficking in the United States
The Epidemiology of Crime Guns: From Legal Sale to Use in Crime
Transnational Crimes among Somali-Americans: Convergences of Radicalization and Trafficking
Victimization and Fear of Crime among Arab Americans in Metro-Detroit
The Interactions and Impacts of State DNA Database Laws
Physical Evidence, Forensic Evidence and the Prosecution of Sexual Assault
Social Networks and Organized Crime
Using Behavioral Patterns to Link Serial Rape Offenses:A Multidimensional Approach
Re-Analysis of Existing Data on Stalking Recidivism
Geography and Public Safety: A Quarterly Bulletin of Applied Geography for the Study of Crime and Public Safety, Volume 3, Issue 1
Predicting Criminal Behavior Among Authorized Purchasers of Handguns
Securing Rights for Victims: A Process Evaluation of the National Crime Victim Law Institute's Victims' Rights Clinics
Project Safe Neighborhoods Case Study Report: Middle District of North Carolina (Case Study 11)
Five Things Law Enforcement Executives Can Do to Make a Difference
Firearms and Violence in American Life
Empirical Assessment of Domestic Radicalization
Interview with Gary Ackerman, Director for Special Projects, National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, University of Maryland
Mr. Ackerman is conducting an empirical assessment of domestic radicalization, with an emphasis on the process of radicalization. In this interview, Ackerman explains how he is using large empirical analysis and small scale life study analysis to discover which factors might cause an individual to make the leap from illegal terrorist behavior to violent terrorist behavior.
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