This publication summarizes the barriers and challenges noted in a study of victim compensation programs conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago and the Urban Institute.
This brief presents barriers and challenges to administering compensation programs and providing compensation support to victims of crime based on a study of victim compensation programs conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago and the Urban Institute. These entities were funded to conduct a national, multi-method study to update knowledge about victim compensation programs. The study relies on data from a survey conducted with victim compensation program administrators across the U.S. and semi-structured interviews conducted with victim compensation stakeholders in four states. In this brief, the authors reflect on both how current barriers and challenges are similar to barriers and challenges reported by compensation programs twenty years ago. They also provide recommendations to better support compensation programs and victims of crime moving forward. In 2003, the Urban Institute published the first comprehensive study of state victim compensation programs to understand compensation program structure, operations, efficiencies, and effectiveness. The current study offers the most rigorous data collection effort on state compensation programs since the 2003 study.
Downloads
Similar Publications
- Identifying the Scope and Context of Missing and/or Murdered Indigenous Persons (MMIP) in New Mexico and Improving MMIP Data Collection, Analysis, and Reporting
- Recreational Cannabis Legalization in Washington State: Residents' Opinions and Perceptions of Effects Five Years after Implementation
- Subadult Virtual Anthropology Database (SVAD) Data Collection Protocol: Cranial Landmarks and Craniometrics