Following are articles published by the National Institute of Justice
Case Characteristics of Untested Sexual Assault Kits in Los Angeles
DNA Testing: Techniques and Results in the Los Angeles Study
NIJ's Action-Research Project in Houston and Detroit
Sleep Disorders, Work Shifts and Officer Wellness
Two recent studies examined the impact of sleep and work schedules on the health and safety of law enforcement officers.
The Case for Testing All Sexual Assault Kits
The Economist's Guide to Crime Busting
The old divide between hard and soft strategies is breaking down under a wave of new thinking about how to control crime.
The Los Angeles Sexual Assault Kit Study Focus Groups
To Err is Human: Using Science to Reduce Mistaken Eyewitness Identifications Through Police Lineups
Researchers take police lineup studies from the laboratory to the field.
Understanding DNA Testing in Sexual Assaults: NIJ's Ongoing Work in Massachusetts
Guidance to Employers and Job Seekers on the Use of Criminal Records in the Hiring Process
Responses to Sexual Violence: Effectiveness of SANE/SART Programs
Effects of Human Factors on the Accuracy of Fingerprint Analysis
NIJ's Drugs and Crime Research: Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Programs
Solving Crime Problems With Research
The Office of Justice Programs' CrimeSolutions offers practitioners and policymakers a practical tool for finding information about evidence-based criminal justice programs
The Second Chance Act and Other Ongoing NIJ Research Projects
The Serious and Violent Offender Reentry Initiative: The Basics
HOPE: A Swift and Certain Process for Probationers
The HOPE program — Hawaii's Opportunity Probation with Enforcement — is an experimental probation program that emphasizes the delivery of "swift and certain" punishment when a probationer violates conditions of probation.