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The Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Act funds programs that have
been proven effective in curbing crime among juvenile probationers
and young at-risk offenders. This report summarizes, for fiscal
year 2009-2010, Corrections Standards Authority-mandated outcome
measures from each of the programs, as well as county-determined
supplemental outcomes.
To assess whether an initiative to reduce gun violence that had
been successful in Boston could be adapted for use elsewhere,
researchers selected an East Los Angeles area for a similar
intervention that was to include both law enforcement and social
service components. Although the latter component was not widely
available when the intervention began, researchers found that the
intervention helped reduce violent and gang crime in the targeted
districts and that crime also decreased in surrounding communities.
Raw statistics for encounters between New York City police officers
and pedestrians suggest large racial disparities less than 89
percent of 2006 stops involved nonwhites. The New York City Police
Department asked RAND to help it understand this and identify
recommendations for addressing potential problems. RAND researchers
analyzed 2006 pedestrian-police encounters, finding small racial
differences in rates of frisk, search, use of force, and arrest.
RAND researchers found small racial differences and make
recommendations here for improvement.
The Juvenile Justice Crime Prevention Act funds programs that have
been proven effective in curbing crime among juvenile probationers
and young at-risk offenders. This report summarizes, for fiscal
year 2008-2009, Corrections Standards Authority-mandated outcome
measures from each of the programs, as well as county-determined
supplemental outcomes.
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