Prisons
Activism and Radicalism in Prison: Measurement and Correlates in a Large Sample of Inmates in Texas
Reducing Institutional Disorder: Using the Inmate Risk Assessment for Segregation Placement to Triage Treatment Services at the Front End of Prison Sentences
Toward an Understanding of What Works" in Segregation: Implementing Correctional Programming and Re-Entry-Focused Services in Restrictive Housing Units
Effect of Administrative Segregation on Prison Order and Organizational Culture
Critical Research Gaps in Understanding the Effects of Prolonged Time in Restrictive Housing on Inmates and the Institutional Environment
Mental Health Effects of Restrictive Housing
Relationship Between Inmate Misconduct, Institutional Violence, and Administrative Segregation: A Systematic Review of the Evidence
Gang Affiliation and Restrictive Housing in U.S. Prisons
Use of Administrative Segregation and Its Function in the Institutional Setting
Modified TC for MICA Offenders: Crime Outcomes
Making the Most of Second Chances: An Evaluation of Minnesota's High-Risk Revocation Reduction Reentry Programs
An Outcome Evaluation of a Prison Work Release Program: Estimating Its Effects on Recidivism, Employment, and Cost Avoidance
The Impact of Prison-Based Treatment on Sex Offender Recidivism
Can Faith-Based Correctional Programs Work? An Outcome Evaluation of the InnerChange Freedom Initiative in Minnesota
Treating Drug-Abusing Women Prisoners: An Outcome Evaluation of the Forever Free Program
Reentering Women: The Impact of Social Ties on Long-Term Recidivism
The imprisonment-extremism nexus: Continuity and change in activism and radicalism intentions in a longitudinal study of prisoner reentry
What if They Are All High-Risk for Attrition? Correlates of Retention in a Longitudinal Study of Reentry from Prison
Women in Solitary Confinement: Relationships, Pseudofamilies, and the Limits of Control
Understanding Incarceration and Re-Entry Experiences of Female Inmates and their Children: The Women’s Prison Inmate Networks Study (WO-PINS)
NIJ-Funded Research on Mass Shootings to Advance Evidence-Based Policy and Practice
Mass public shootings continue to threaten communities in the United States, yet research on this criminal phenomenon is limited. In this full thematic panel, renowned experts will present a series of research projects summarizing NIJ-funded research projects’ newest findings on public mass shootings. The discussion will focus on NIJ’s investment to address the phenomenon of mass shootings through innovative study approaches to advance our understanding of mass shootings and inform prevention efforts. The implications of this research to criminal justice will also be discussed.
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Desistance From Crime: Implications for Research, Policy, and Practice
Most scholars would agree that desistance from crime – the process of ceasing engagement in criminal activities – is normative. However, there is variability in the literature regarding the definition and measurement of desistance, the signals of desistance, the age at which desistance begins, and the underlying mechanisms that lead to desistance. Even with considerable advances in the theoretical understanding of desistance from crime, there remain critical gaps between research and the application of that research to practice.
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