All Stories

  1. Reforming the police through procedural justice training: A multicity randomized trial at crime hot spots
  2. What is the best approach for preventing recruitment to terrorism? Findings from ABM experiments in social and situational prevention
  3. Enhancing Informal Social Controls to Reduce Crime: Evidence from a Study of Crime Hot Spots
  4. Institutionalizing problem‐oriented policing: An evaluation of the EMUN reform in Israel
  5. Poor Health and Violent Crime Hot Spots: Mitigating the Undesirable Co-Occurrence Through Focused Place-Based Interventions
  6. Building collective action at crime hot spots: Findings from a randomized field experiment
  7. “Translational Criminology” in action: a national survey of TSA’s Playbook implementation at U.S. Airports
  8. Experimental criminology: looking back and forward on the 20th anniversary of the Academy of Experimental Criminology
  9. A Field-Wide Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Putative Risk and Protective Factors for Radicalization Outcomes
  10. Perspectives of people with mental health problems at hot spots: Attitudes and perceptions of safety, crime, and the police
  11. Introduction
  12. Understanding the role of service providers, land use, and resident characteristics on the occurrence of mental health crisis calls to the police
  13. Focused deterrence strategies effects on crime: A systematic review
  14. Do religious programs in prison work? A quasi-experimental evaluation in the Israeli prison service
  15. Crime and Terror: Examining Criminal Risk Factors for Terrorist Recidivism
  16. Updated protocol: The effects of problem‐oriented policing on crime and disorder: An updated systematic review
  17. Proactive Policing: a Summary of the Report of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine
  18. The Proclivity to Rely on Professional Experience and Evidence-Based Policing: Findings From a Survey of High-Ranking Officers in the Israel Police
  19. Hot Spots of Crime Are Not Just Hot Spots of Crime: Examining Health Outcomes at Street Segments
  20. Epigenetics and Hot Spots of Crime: Rethinking the Relationship Between Genetics and Criminal Behavior
  21. Analyzing block randomized studies: the example of the Jersey City drug market analysis experiment
  22. Examining the Impact of the Freddie Gray Unrest on Perceptions of the Police
  23. Advancing knowledge about replication in criminology
  24. The Impact of Hot Spots Policing on Collective Efficacy: Findings from a Randomized Field Trial
  25. Place-based policing: new directions, new challenges
  26. Collaborative problem-solving at youth crime hot spots: a pilot study
  27. Mean Streets and Mental Health: Depression and Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder at Crime Hot Spots
  28. Proactive Policing
  29. The Winding Road to Evidence-Based Policy in Corrections: A Case Study of the Israel Prison Service
  30. Crime & Social Organization
  31. Can You Build a Better Cop?
  32. Focused Deterrence Strategies and Crime Control
  33. Hot Spots of Crime and Place-Based Prevention
  34. Unraveling the Crime-Place Connection, Volume 22
  35. “The Whole Is Greater Than the Sum of the Parts”: Prison Staff Perceptions of Domestic Violence Rehabilitation Programs
  36. Proactive policing and crime control
  37. A Co-Responder Model for Policing Mental Health Problems at Crime Hot Spots: Findings from a Pilot Project
  38. The Effect of Paramilitary Protest Policing on Protestors' Trust in the Police: The Case of the “Occupy Israel” Movement
  39. Quantitative Methods in Criminology
  40. The Criminology of Place: Key Contributions and Commentary
  41. Erratum to: Reinforcing the impacts of work release on prisoner recidivism: the importance of integrative interventions
  42. What Works in Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation
  43. For Prisoners, “Work Works”: Qualitative Findings From an Israeli Program
  44. Reinforcing the impacts of work release on prisoner recidivism: the importance of integrative interventions
  45. Assessing community consequences of implementing hot spots policing in residential areas: findings from a randomized field trial
  46. CAN HOT SPOTS POLICING REDUCE CRIME IN URBAN AREAS? AN AGENT-BASED SIMULATION*
  47. Developmental trajectories of offenders convicted of fraud: A follow-up to age 50 in a Dutch conviction cohort
  48. Why Getting Inside the “Black Box” Is Important
  49. Explaining Recent Crime Trends: Introduction to the Special Issue
  50. Long-Term Effects of Social and Personal Capital on Offending Trajectories in a Sample of White-Collar Offenders
  51. The “care package,” prison domestic violence programs and recidivism: a quasi-experimental study
  52. Testing the “Law of Crime Concentration at Place” in a Suburban Setting: Implications for Research and Practice
  53. Reducing the gap in perceptions of legitimacy of victims and non-victims
  54. Place Matters
  55. Where the Action is in Crime? An Examination of Variability of Crime Across Different Spatial Units in The Hague, 2001–2009
  56. Foreword to the 10th Anniversary Special Issue
  57. Do Stop, Question, and Frisk Practices Deter Crime?
  58. Policing in Israel
  59. Using Space–Time Analysis to Evaluate Criminal Justice Programs: An Application to Stop-Question-Frisk Practices
  60. Increasing Collective Efficacy and Social Capital at Crime Hot Spots: New Crime Control Tools for Police
  61. Editors’ Note
  62. The Dallas patrol management experiment: can AVL technologies be used to harness unallocated patrol time for crime prevention?
  63. Understanding the Mechanisms Underlying Broken Windows Policing
  64. THE LAW OF CRIME CONCENTRATION AND THE CRIMINOLOGY OF PLACE*
  65. Focused Deterrence and the Prevention of Violent Gun Injuries: Practice, Theoretical Principles, and Scientific Evidence
  66. Transforming the Police Through Science: The Challenge of Ownership
  67. Foreword to the special issue: NPIA systematic reviews in policing
  68. Community-oriented policing to reduce crime, disorder and fear and increase satisfaction and legitimacy among citizens: a systematic review
  69. Generating knowledge: a case study of the National Policing Improvement Agency program on systematic reviews in policing
  70. Displacement of crime and diffusion of crime control benefits in large-scale geographic areas: a systematic review
  71. Must we settle for less rigorous evaluations in large area-based crime prevention programs? Lessons from a Campbell review of focused deterrence
  72. The Importance of Both Opportunity and Social Disorganization Theory in a Future Research Agenda to Advance Criminological Theory and Crime Prevention at Places
  73. Hot Spots Policing
  74. Policing terrorism and police–community relations: views of the Arab minority in Israel
  75. Trends in Israeli policing: terrorism, community, victimization and crime control
  76. The law of concentrations of crime at place: the case of Tel Aviv-Jaffa
  77. Policing Terrorism, Crime Control, and Police-Community Relations
  78. Statistics in Criminal Justice
  79. Evidence and Public Policy
  80. The Problem Is Not Just Sample Size
  81. Editors’ Introduction
  82. Block Randomized Trials at Places: Rethinking the Limitations of Small N Experiments
  83. Understanding and Controlling Hot Spots of Crime: The Importance of Formal and Informal Social Controls
  84. Could Innovations in Policing have Contributed to the New York City Crime Drop even in a Period of Declining Police Strength?: The Case of Stop, Question and Frisk as a Hot Spots Policing Strategy
  85. The Criminology of Place
  86. How Much Time Should the Police Spend at Crime Hot Spots? Answers from a Police Agency Directed Randomized Field Trial in Sacramento, California
  87. What is Known About the Effectiveness of Police Practices in Reducing Crime and Disorder?
  88. Bringing Social Context Back Into the Equation
  89. Going beyond Ascribed Identities: The Importance of Procedural Justice in Airport Security Screening in Israel
  90. From the Editor
  91. An experimental study of compressed work schedules in policing: advantages and disadvantages of various shift lengths
  92. The Effects of Security Threats on Antecedents of Police Legitimacy
  93. The Effects of Focused Deterrence Strategies on Crime
  94. The possible “backfire” effects of hot spots policing: an experimental assessment of impacts on legitimacy, fear and collective efficacy
  95. Introduction of a structured abstract
  96. Editor’s Note
  97. To Protect and To Serve
  98. Policing Problem Places
  99. Does Forensic DNA Help to Solve Crime? The Benefit of Sophisticated Answers to Naive Questions
  100. Preventing repeat incidents of family violence: a randomized field test of a second responder program
  101. Are criminologists describing randomized controlled trials in ways that allow us to assess them? Findings from a sample of crime and justice trials
  102. Justifying the use of non-experimental methods and disqualifying the use of randomized controlled trials: challenging folklore in evaluation research in crime and justice
  103. Changing Prison Into a Therapeutic Milieu: Evidence From the Israeli National Rehabilitation Center for Prisoners
  104. A framework for mandatory impact evaluation to ensure well informed public policy decisions
  105. Is it Important to Examine Crime Trends at a Local “Micro” Level?: A Longitudinal Analysis of Street to Street Variability in Crime Trajectories
  106. Editors’ Introduction: Empirical Evidence on the Relevance of Place in Criminology
  107. Terrorist Threats and Police Performance: A Study of Israeli Communities
  108. The Israeli Model for Policing Terrorism
  109. Hot Spots of Juvenile Crime: A Longitudinal Study of Arrest Incidents at Street Segments in Seattle, Washington
  110. Putting Crime in its Place
  111. La diffusion de l'innovation dans la police
  112. The Criminology of White-Collar Crime
  113. The irony of broken windows policing: A micro-place study of the relationship between disorder, focused police crackdowns and fear of crime
  114. The Limits of Regional Data Sharing and Regional Problem Solving
  115. Risk‐Focused Policing at Places: An Experimental Evaluation
  116. How Well Do Criminologists Explain Crime? Statistical Modeling in Published Studies
  117. Experimental and quasi-experimental criminological research in the Netherlands
  118. Making Sense of COMPSTAT: A Theory-Based Analysis of Organizational Change in Three Police Departments
  119. Improving evaluation of anti-crime programs: Summary of a National Research Council report★
  120. Introduction to the special issue on the evaluation of anti-crime programs
  121. DOES CRIME JUST MOVE AROUND THE CORNER? A CONTROLLED STUDY OF SPATIAL DISPLACEMENT AND DIFFUSION OF CRIME CONTROL BENEFITS
  122. Statistics in Criminal Justice
  123. Police Innovation
  124. When “More” of a Program is Not Necessarily Better: Drug Prevention in the Sharon Prison
  125. Special Issue Preface
  126. Special issue preface
  127. Hot Spots Policing Experiments and Criminal Justice Research: Lessons from the Field
  128. Compstat and bureaucracy: A case study of challenges and opportunities for change
  129. What Can Police Do to Reduce Crime, Disorder, and Fear?
  130. Ethical Practice and Evaluation of Interventions in Crime and Justice
  131. When can we Conclude that Treatments or Programs “Don’t Work”?
  132. Introduction
  133. The Role of Crime Victims in American Policing: Findings from a National Survey of Police and Victim Organizations
  134. Community policing in Israel
  135. Does Research Design Affect Study Outcomes in Criminal Justice?
  136. Magic and Science in Multivariate Sentencing Models: Reflections on the Limits of Statistical Methods
  137. Crime and Disorder in Drug Hot Spots: Implications for Theory and Practice in Policing
  138. Randomized Experiments in Criminal Justice Policy: Prospects and Problems
  139. General deterrent effects of police patrol in crime “hot spots”: A randomized, controlled trial
  140. Policing drug hot spots: The Jersey City drug market analysis experiment
  141. SPECIFIC DETERRENCE IN A SAMPLE OF OFFENDERS CONVICTED OF WHITE COLLAR CRIMES*
  142. Experimentation in Criminal Justice: Editors' Introduction
  143. The Integrated Social Control Model and Ethnicity
  144. White-Collar Crime and Criminal Careers: Some Preliminary Findings
  145. Class, Status, and the Punishment of White-Collar Criminals
  146. Good Time
  147. Vigilantism as community social control: Developing a quantitative criminological model