Social and Behavioral Science
Managing Drug Involved Probationers with Swift and Certain Sanctions: Evaluating Hawaii's HOPE
Developing Data Driven Supervision Protocols For Positive Parole Outcomes
Conceptualizing and Measuring Financial Exploitation and Psychological Abuse of Elderly Individuals
Learning From 9/11: Organizational Change in the New York City and Arlington County, Va., Police Departments
Investigating Prisoner Reentry: The Impact of Conviction Status on the Employment Prospects of Young Men
Can You Predict Lethal Intimate Partner Violence?
Expert Chat Webinar
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Crime Mapping and Hot Spots Policing
David Weisburd, recipient of the 2010 Stockholm Prize in Criminology, explains research showing that intensified police patrols in high-crime hot spots can substantially decrease crime without causing it to rise in other areas. He explains the effectiveness of policing that concentrates prevention efforts at less than 5 percent of all street corners and addresses where more than 50 percent of urban crime occurs. The evidence suggests that crimes depend not just on criminals, but also on policing in key places.
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