White Americans
Racial/Ethnic Differences in Alcohol and Drug Misuse Among IPV-Victimized Women: Exploring the Role of Difficulties Regulating Positive Emotions
Paraphilia and Antisociality: Motivations for Sexual Offending May Differ for American Whites and Blacks.
Experiences of Sexual Assault, Economic Insecurity, and Health in an Ethnically Diverse Sample of Women
Age-at-Death Estimation for Modern Populations in Mexico and Puerto Rico through the Use of 3D Laser Scans of the Pubic Symphysis
Development of Modern Subadult Standards: Improved Age and Sex Estimation in U.S. Forensic Practice
Overcoming School Safety Intervention Implementation Challenges - Breakout Session, NIJ Virtual Conference on School Safety
On February 16-18, 2021, the National Institute of Justice hosted the Virtual Conference on School Safety: Bridging Research to Practice to Safeguard Our Schools. This video includes the following presentations:
See the YouTube Terms of Service and Google Privacy Policy
Criminal Victimization of Minorities - A Statistical Profile
Influence of Race/Ethnicity, Social Class, and Neighborhood Context on Residents' Attitudes Toward the Police
Ancestry Estimation in Forensic Anthropology: Geometric Morphometric versus Standard and Nonstandard Interlandmark Distances
Ancestry Assessment Using Random Forest Modeling
Sexual Dimorphism in America: Geometric Morphometric Analysis of the Craniofacial Region
Self-Reports of Police Speeding Stops by Race: Results From the North Carolina Reverse Record Check Survey
Lateral Clavicular Epiphysis: Fusion Timing and Age Estimation
Heroin Use Among Southern Arrestees: Regional Findings From the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program
Secular Changes in the Postcranial Skeleton of American Whites
Adolescent Girls: The Role of Depression in the Development of Delinquency
Remarkable Change in Euro-American Cranial Shape and Size
Neighborhood Structure and Race-Specific Rates of Intimate Assault
Postcranial Sex Estimation Criteria for Mexican Hispanics
Racially Biased Policing: Determinants of Citizen Perceptions
African-American and White Perceptions of Police Services: Within- and Between-Group Variation
A Multifactorial Approach to Estimating Geographic Origin of Hispanics Using Cranial and Dental Data
Why Is the United States the Most Homicidal Nation in the Affluent World?
Ohio State University Since World War II, the homicide rate in the U.S. has been three to ten times higher than in Canada, Western Europe, and Japan. This, however, has not always been the case. What caused the dramatic change? Dr. Roth discussed how and why rates of different kinds of homicide have varied across time and space over the past 450 years, including an examination of the murder of children by parents or caregivers, intimate partner violence, and homicides among unrelated adults.
See the YouTube Terms of Service and Google Privacy Policy
Legitimacy and Community Cooperation With Law Enforcement
Tom R. Tyler, chair of the New York University psychology department, describes research on profiling and community policing. His research found that citizens of all races show greater respect for law enforcement when they believe officers are treating them fairly. Even citizens who experienced a negative outcome getting a traffic ticket, for example showed higher levels of respect for and cooperation with law enforcement as long as they believed they were not being singled out unfairly.
See the YouTube Terms of Service and Google Privacy Policy