Police equipment
Chiefs' Panel Points to Top Issues and Related Innovation Needs Facing Law Enforcement
Criminal Justice Restraints Standard, NIJ Standard-1001.00, Revision A
National Institute of Justice, Annual Report 2017
Trends in Arrests and Investigative Techniques of Technology-Facilitated Child Sexual Exploitation Crimes: The 4th National Juvenile Online Victimization Study
Mobile Evidential Breath Alcohol Instruments
Common Operational Picture Technology in Law Enforcement: A Market Review
Evaluation of Gunshot Detection Technology to Aid in the Reduction of Firearms Violence
National Institute of Justice: Strengthening Science and Advancing Justice
Criminal Justice Testing and Evaluation Consortium
Reducing Gun Violence through Integrated Forensic Evidence Collection, Analysis and Sharing
Neighborhood Crime Survey: An Examination of the Relationship Between Immigration and Victimization
The Next Revision of the NIJ Performance Standard for Ballistic Resistance of Body Armor
Unmanned Aircraft Systems Can Support Law Enforcement in Crash Scene Reconstruction
Improving the Reliability of Drug Tests Done by Officers
Looking at the Impact on Policing of Body Worn Cameras
Conducted Energy Devices: Policies on Use Evolve To Reflect Research and Field Deployment Experience
Body-Worn Cameras: What the Evidence Tells Us
NIJ Journal Issue No. 258
NIJ Journal Issue No. 263
NIJ Journal Issue No. 280
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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Less Prison, More Police, Less Crime: How Criminology Can Save the States from Bankruptcy
Professor Lawrence Sherman explains how policing can prevent far more crimes than prison per dollar spent. His analysis of the cost-effectiveness of prison compared to policing suggests that states can cut their total budgets for justice and reduce crime by reallocating their spending on crime: less prison, more police.
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