Violence
Romantic Relationship Characteristics and Adolescent Relationship Abuse in a Probability-Based Sample of Youth
Romantic Relationship Characteristics and Adolescent Relationship Abuse in a Probability-Based Sample of Youth
Investigation of a Typology of Alcohol-Related Violence Defined by Ultimate Goals
Scope and Conceptual Issues in Testing the Race-Crime Invariance Thesis: Black, White, and Hispanic Comparisons
Domains of Masculine Gender Role Stress and Intimate Partner Violence in a Clinical Sample of Violent Men
Harassment, Discrimination, Violence, and Illicit Drug Use Among Young Men Who Have Sex With Men
Globalization, Frontier Masculinities and Violence: Booze, Brokes and Brawls
But Sometimes I Think...They Put Themselves in the Situation: Exploring Blame and Responsibility in Interpersonal Violence
Gender Differences in Partner Violence in Context: Deconstructing Johnson's (2001) Control-Based Typology of Violent Couples
Why the Overwhelming Evidence on Partner Physical Violence by Women Has Not Been Perceived and Is Often Denied
Role of Violence in Street Crime: A Qualitative Study of Violent Offenders
Behavioural Indicators of Motives for Barroom Aggression: Implications for Preventing Bar Violence
Police and Security Officer Experiences of Occupational Violence and Injury in Australia
Victim-Offender Overlap in Context: Examining the Role of Neighborhood Street Culture
Reliability, Validity, and Prevalence of Partner Violence Measured by the Conflict Tactics Scales in Male-Dominant Nations
Does Intra-Individual Change Predict Offender Recidivism?: Searching for the Holy Grail in Assessing Offender Change
The North Carolina Youth Violence Prevention Center: Using a Multifaceted, Ecological Approach to Reduce Youth Violence in Impoverished, Rural Areas
An exploratory study of violence and aggression against teachers in middle and high schools: Prevalence, predictors, and negative consequences
Formative Evaluation of a Hospital-based Violence Intervention Programs and Victim Services in Chicago
Tribal Crime, Justice, and Safety (Part 2)
Stacy Lee Reynolds and Christine (Tina) Crossland continue their discussion of tribal crime, justice, and safety, including how Native American persons experience crime victimization at higher rates than non-Native people and the jurisdictional complexities in responding to tribal crime, justice, and safety. Read the transcript.
Listen to the first half of Stacy and Tina’s discussion.
Reading and Resources from NIJ
Tribal-Researcher Capacity Building Grants
Tribal Crime, Justice, and Safety (Part 1)
Research indicates that Native American persons experience crime victimization at higher rates than non-Native people. Furthermore, the unique position of American Indian and Alaska Native tribes as both sovereign nations and domestic dependents of the U.S. creates jurisdictional complexities in responding to crime, justice, and safety. Senior social and behavioral scientist Christine (Tina) Crossland discusses NIJ’s research on these topics, especially on the prevention of violence towards American Indians and Alaska Natives. Communications Assistant Stacy Lee Reynolds hosts.