Situational crime prevention
Advancing Situational and Developmental Approaches To Prevent Sexual Violence
Mitigating the Harm of Public Mass Shooting Incidents through Situational Crime Prevention
NIJ Journal Issue No. 231
The Situation Contexts of American Terrorism: A Conjunction Analysis of Case Configurations
Extreme Ideologies, Situational Factors, and Terrorists’ Target Selection
What Works in Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation: Lessons From Systematic Reviews
The Situated Contexts of American Terrorism: A Conjunctive Analysis of Case Configurations
Creation of School Shooting Open-Source Database Fuels Understanding
Preventing Violence and Sexual Assault in Jail: A Situational Crime Prevention Approach
Evaluation of a Situational Crime Prevention Approach in Three Jails: The Jail Sexual Assault Prevention Project
Neighborhoods Matter: A Situational Policing Perspective
Avoiding Violent Victimization Among Youths in Urban Neighborhoods: The Importance of Street Efficacy
Distribution of and Factors Associated With Intimate Terrorism and Situational Couple Violence Among a Population-Based Sample of Urban Women in the United States
Crime Prevention Through Neighborhood Revitalization: Does Practice Reflect Theory?
Importance of Both Opportunity and Social Disorganization Theory in a Future Research Agenda to Advance Criminological Theory and Crime Prevention at Places
Assessing the Attractiveness and Vulnerability of Eco-Terrorism Targets: A Situational Crime Prevention Approach
Crime Prevention Policy and Government Research: A Comparison of the United States and United Kingdom
Corrections Assistance
Use of Civil Remedies for Neighborhood Crime and Drug Abatement by Community Organizations
Systematic Analysis of Product Counterfeiting Schemes, Offenders, and Victims in the United States
Mitigating the Harm of Public Mass Shootings through Situational Crime Prevention
Situational Approaches to Making Communities and Correction Institutions Safer - Panel at the 2010 NIJ Conference
NIJ Conference panelists will present the results of three studies that applied situational crime prevention (SCP) principles: (1) an evaluation of the Safe City initiative in Chula Vista, Calif., designed to combine the expertise and resources of local law enforcement, retailers and the community to increase the safety of designated retail areas; (2) a randomized controlled trial (in partnership with the Washington Metro Transit Police) that assessed the effectiveness of SCP to reduce car crime in Metro's parking facilities; and (3) an evaluation of the impact of SCP