Offenses
Preparing for the Future: Criminal Justice in 2040
Predicting a Criminal's Journey to Crime
DNA Analysis for "Minor" Crimes: A Major Benefit for Law Enforcement
David Weisburd Wins the Stockholm Prize in Criminology
Automated Information Sharing: Does It Help Law Enforcement Officers Work Better?
Piecing Together the Cross-National Crime Puzzle
Spreading the Wealth: The Effect of the Distribution of Income and Race/Ethnicity Across Households and Neighborhoods on City Crime Trajectories
Community-Based Violence Prevention: An Assessment of Pittsburgh's One Vision One Life Program
The Impact of Foreclosures on Neighborhood Crime
Detection of Crime, Resource Deployment,and Predictors of Success: A Proposed Multi-Level Analysis of CCTV inNewark, NJ.
Predictive modeling combining short and long-term crime risk potential
Residence Restriction Legislation and Sex Offender Residential Locations in New York
Foreclosures and Crime: A Space-Time Analysis
Bringing Geography to the Practice of Analyzing Crime Through Technology
Making Sense of DNA Backlogs - Myths vs. Reality
NIJ addresses the challenge of keeping up with an increasing volume of evidence.
David Weisburd Wins the Stockholm Prize in Criminology
The National Institute of Justice congratulates Dr. David Weisburd, winner of the 2010 Stockholm Prize, for his groundbreaking work in hot spots policing.
Untested Evidence: Not Just a Crime Lab Issue
A new study examines forensic evidence caseloads in law enforcement agencies.