Sex offenses
Associations Between Objective and Subjective Experiences of Childhood Maltreatment and the Course of Emotional Disorders in Adulthood
Creating a Digital Trauma Informed Space: Chat and Text Advocacy for Survivors of Violence
Expert versus Youth Raters on Measuring Social and Therapeutic Climate in Secure Juvenile Placement
A brief study on the effects of storage conditions on sexual lubricant components in the presence of a biological fluid
Detectives’ Descriptions of Their Responses to Sexual Assault Cases and Victims: Assessing the Overlap Between Rape Myths and Focal Concerns
Detecting Drug Exposure Long After the Fact: New Method Proves Effective
The sexual assault microbiome: Detecting contact when minimal male DNA is present.
New Age Therapeutics: Development and Validation of an Analytical Workflow for the Analysis of Psychedelics in Biological Matrices
Alternative direct-to-amplification sperm cell lysis techniques for sexual assault sample processing
Cold Cases and Serial Killers, Part 1
In April 2018, the Golden State Killer, Joseph DeAngelo was arrested. NIJ support helped lead to his arrest, and in the aftermath of the arrest, NIJ Social Science Analyst Eric Martin was among those tasked with finding other cases NIJ helped law enforcement solve. Eric joins the show to talk about some of those cases, and answer some broader questions about serial killers: What is a serial killer? Are they on the rise? How do we know how many serial killers are currently active?
Time Since Deposition for Touch DNA Evidence
Developmental Validation of a Novel Multi-analyte Recovery Method for Trace Biological Samples
Reproductive Coercion and Intimate Partner Violence Victimization Among a Racially and Ethnically Diverse Young Adult Sample
Military Sexual Trauma Experiences of Female Veterans in Michigan
Automation of Sexual Assault DNA Processing Increases Efficiency
Inclusive Research: Engaging People Closest to the Issue Makes for Better Science & Greater Impact; 2023 NIJ Research Conference Plenary
This panel will discuss what inclusive research is, how to conduct it, and what issues and challenges exist about engaging in it. “Inclusive research” has its history as a participatory research method designed to ensure people closest to the issue or problem under study are authentically engaged in the research process rather than simply being “research subjects.” While community-based participatory research has begun to take on greater prominence in the criminal justice realm, such efforts are largely confined to qualitative research inquiries.
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