Victimization risk
Efforts to Reduce Consumer Fraud Victimization Among the Elderly: The Effect of Information Access on Program Awareness and Contact
Young Gang Membership and Serious Violent Victimization: The Importance of Lifestyles and Routine Activities
Conflict Management Styles and Cybervictimization: Extending Routine Activity Theory
Intimate Partner Violence Against Athabaskan Women Residing in Interior Alaska: Results of a Victimization Survey
Prevalence of and Risk Markers for Dating Abuse-Related Stalking and Harassment Victimization and Perpetration in a Nationally Representative Sample of U.S. Adolescents
Crime in the Ivory Tower: The Level and Sources of Student Victimization
Young Women and Gang Violence: Gender, Street Offending, and Violent Victimization in Gangs
Variables Differentiating Singly and Multiply Victimized Youth: Results From the National Survey of Adolescents and Implications for Secondary Prevention
I Got Your Back: An Examination of the Protective Function of Gang Membership in Adolescence
Confronting Online Extremism - The Effect of Self-Help, Collective Efficacy, and Guardianship on Being a Target for Hate Speech
Gender and Victimization Risk Among Young Women in Gangs
Young Adult Intimate Partner Femicide: An Exploratory Study
Predicting Re-Victimization of Battered Women 3 Years After Exiting a Shelter Program
Longitudinal Dating Violence Victimization among Latino Teens: Rates, Risk Factors, and Cultural Influences
Gaps in Reporting Human Trafficking Incidents Result in Significant Undercounting
Geography and Public Safety: A Quarterly Bulletin of Applied Geography for the Study of Crime & Public Safety, Volume 1, Issue 1
No Bully System in Oakland (CA) Elementary Schools Shows Limited Benefits
When Grandpa Gave Away the Farm: His Own Darn Fault, or a Case of Elder Abuse?
Understanding and Measuring Bias Victimization Against Latinos
Violent Repeat Victimization: Prospects and Challenges for Research and Practice
Research tells us that a relatively small fraction of individuals experience a large proportion of violent victimizations. Thus, focusing on reducing repeat victimization might have a large impact on total rates of violence. However, research also tells us that most violent crime victims do not experience more than one incident during a six-month or one-year time period. As a result, special policies to prevent repeat violence may not be cost-effective for most victims.
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How Effective Are Lethality Assessment Programs for Addressing Intimate Partner Violence?
Violence Against American Indian and Alaska Native Women and Men (Video)
Benefit-Cost Analysis for Crime Policy
How do we decide how to allocate criminal justice resources in a way that minimizes the social harms from both crime and policy efforts to control crime? How, for that matter, do we decide how much to spend on the criminal justice system and crime control generally, versus other pressing needs? These questions are at the heart of benefit-cost analysis.
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Children Exposed to Violence
Panelists will discuss the results of the recent Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention's National Survey on Children's Exposure to Violence and findings from a seven-year follow-up study, funded by NIJ, on home visitation in New York. The survey's findings included startling figures: More than 60 percent of the children interviewed were exposed to violence, crime and abuse within the past year, and more than 1 in 10 were injured in an assault.