Social and Behavioral Science
Breaking the School-To-Prison Pipeline: Implications of Removing Police from Schools for Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Justice System
Improved Officer Decision-Making and Stress Management with Virtual Environments
Evaluating a Young Adult Court (YAC) to Address Inequalities for Transitional Age Youth in Orange County
FY23 OJP Correctional Education Evaluation Package
NIJ FY24 Evaluation of BJA Byrne State Crisis Intervention Program (SCIP): Scan of Practices and Evaluability Assessments
Expansion of University of South Florida's BRIGHT Project to Combat Human Trafficking
Human Trafficking Data Project
Safe Transitions for Teens
AI R&D to Support Community Supervision: Integrated Dynamic Risk Assessment for Community Supervision (IDRACS), Final Report
Five Things About Youth and Delinquency
These five findings provide insights into the nature, scope, and context of youth and delinquency.
A Randomized Controlled Trial of the Scenarios and Solutions Gang Prevention Program
Five Things About Youth and Delinquency
Practices for Law Enforcement Interviews of Potential Human Trafficking Victims: A Scoping Review
Using Scammers’ Data to Estimate the Impact and Importance of Preventing Repeat Mail Fraud Victimization
Examining Radicalization's Risk and Protective Factors: A Case-Control Study of Violent Extremists, Non-Violent Criminal Extremists, Non-offending Extremists & Regular Violent Offenders
NIJ FY24 Invited to Apply – Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development: Social Development Sub-study (ABCD-SD)
NIJ FY24 Invited to Apply - American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) Science & Technology Policy Fellowships (STPF)
Redesigning Life in U.S. Prisons
The prison system in the U.S. typically places a heavy emphasis on security, control, and punishment, and this foundation can create an adversarial culture within correctional facilities — incarcerated individuals versus correctional staff. But what if that culture could change? What would it look like? How would it impact not only incarcerated individuals but also correctional officers and other staff?