Violence
Workshop on Evaluating the Impact of Programs Under the Violence Against Women Act, December 15, 2000
CDC Grand Rounds: Preventing Youth Violence
Is Burglary a Crime of Violence? An Analysis of National Data 1998-2007
Life Course, Relationship, and Situational Contexts of Teen Dating Violence: A Final Summary Overview
Building Healthy Teen Relationships: An Evaluation of the Fourth R Curriculum with Middle School Students in the Bronx
A Group Randomized Trial of Restorative Justice Programming to Address the School to Prison Pipeline, Reduce Aggression and Violence, and Enhance School Safety in Middle and High School Students
Wisconsin School Violence and Bullying Prevention Study
Reducing Drug Violence in Mexico: Options for Implementing Targeted Enforcement
Impact of Immigration on Ethnic-Specific Violence
Situational Crime Prevention at Specific Locations in Community Context: Place and Neighborhood Effects
Assessing the Relationship Between Exposure to Violence and Inmate Maladjustment Within and Across State Correctional Facilities
Violence Prevention: Moving from Evidence to Implementation
Measuring Success in Focused Deterrence
Enhancing Knowledge of Dispute-Related Violence
Spatio-Temporal Assessment of Exposure to Neighborhood Violence
Geography and Public Safety: A Bulletin of Applied Geography for the Study of Crime and Public Safety, Volume 3, Issue 2, August 2012
Violence Against American Indian and Alaska Native Women: Program of Research
Empirical Assessment of Domestic Radicalization
Interview with Gary Ackerman, Director for Special Projects, National Consortium for the Study of Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism, University of Maryland
Mr. Ackerman is conducting an empirical assessment of domestic radicalization, with an emphasis on the process of radicalization. In this interview, Ackerman explains how he is using large empirical analysis and small scale life study analysis to discover which factors might cause an individual to make the leap from illegal terrorist behavior to violent terrorist behavior.
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Classifying Drug Markets by Travel Patterns: Testing Reuter and MacCoun's Typology of Market Violence
Protecting our Protectors: Using Science to Improve Officer Safety and Wellness
Each year, 100-200 law enforcement officers die in the line of duty. Last year, 177 lost their lives — a 16-percent increase from 2010. As Attorney General Eric Holder noted, this is a devastating and unacceptable trend. NIJ has developed a robust research portfolio to improve officer safety and wellness and, ultimately, save lives. This panel discussed some of NIJ's most promising work to reduce shooting and traffic-related fatalities — consistently the leading causes of officer line-of-duty deaths — and improve officer wellness, which is inextricably linked with officer safety.
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