State laws
Three Strikes and You're Out: Vengeance as Public Policy
NCJ Number
163458
Date Published
1996
Police Administrator Attitudes Toward the Concealed Handgun Law
NCJ Number
163550
Date Published
1996
Role of the US Military in the War on Drugs (From The Latin American Narcotics Trade and US National Security, 1989, P 75-88, Donald J. Mabry, ed.)
NCJ Number
162260
Date Published
1989
Epidemiologic Trends in Drug Abuse: V 2, Proceedings, Community Epidemiology Work Group
NCJ Number
162473
Date Published
1996
Criminalizing Free Speech: California's Ban on Witnesses Who Have Sold Their Testimony for a Fee
NCJ Number
163126
Journal
San Diego Justice Journal
Date Published
1995
Who's Accountable for Punitive Damages: Government Employees or the Elected Officials Under California Government Code Section 825(b)?
NCJ Number
163127
Journal
San Diego Justice Journal
Date Published
1995
California's "Three Strikes" Law: An Unconstitutional Infringement Upon the Power of the Judiciary?
NCJ Number
163128
Journal
San Diego Justice Journal
Date Published
1995
Hate Crimes Legislation: Panacea or Protractor of Societal Ills?
NCJ Number
163123
Journal
San Diego Justice Journal
Date Published
1995
Juvenile Adjudications and California's "Three Strikes" Law: Violation of Due Process?
NCJ Number
163124
Journal
San Diego Justice Journal
Date Published
1995
Mentally Disordered Offenders: The California Experience
NCJ Number
163082
Journal
Corrective and Social Psychiatry and Journal of Behavior Technology Methods and Therapy
Date Published
1995
United States v. Lopez; Reevaluating Congressional Authority Under the Commerce Clause
NCJ Number
163099
Journal
St. John's Law Review
Date Published
1995
Determinate Sentencing and Abolishing Parole: The Long-Term Impacts on Prisons and Crime
NCJ Number
163189
Journal
Criminology
Date Published
1996
Agencies
NIJ-Sponsored
Publication Link
Constitutional Law Commerce Clause - Mere Possession of a Firearm Does Not Substantially Affect Interstate Commerce; and a Federal Law, 18 USC § 922(q), Making Mere Possession a Crime, Exceeds Congressional Power Pursuant to the Commerce Clause (United States v. Lopez, 115 S.Ct. 1624 (1995))
NCJ Number
162998
Journal
Seton Hall Law Review
Date Published
1996