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Publications & Digital Media

Format
  • Publication

    Young Offenders, Electronic Monitoring, Cell Phones, and Battery Life

    by Shubha Bala and Jethro Antoine

    The Center for Court Innovation piloted a small electronic monitoring program—using smartphones—for young people under justice supervision. This article offers insights into the best ways to approach technology projects in the justice system, but also concludes that electronic tracking of 16- to 18-year-olds in school raised multiple challenges and provided too little benefit to serve as a replacement for traditional supervision methods.

    Technology, Diversion, Learning from Failure
  • Audio

    The Pathological Politics of Criminal Justice

    by Matt Watkins

    Rachel Barkow contends criminal justice policy is a “prisoner of politics,” driven by appeals to voters’ worst instincts and an aversion to evidence of what actually works. In her new book, the NYU law professor makes a provocative case for “freeing” criminal justice from the political imperative in order to achieve real reform.

    Bail Reform, Evidence-Based Practices, Learning from Failure, Reentry
  • Audio

    How Do We Tell What's Working? Disrupting the Justice Evaluation Model

    by Matt Watkins

    Who gets to decide which reforms to the criminal justice system receive the imprimatur of "evidence-based"? To combat what she sees as the monopoly over these decisions created by the high cost of the current evaluation model, Angela Hawken founded BetaGov, offering free and fast evaluations of public policy programs. What is more, as Hawken explains on our New Thinking podcast, the ideas tested generally come from practitioners, or even clients, inside the systems themselves.

    Evidence-Based Practices, Learning from Failure
  • Video

    Leadership and Innovation in Criminal Justice: A National Survey (with audio)

    This presentation—with audio commentary provided by Aubrey Fox and Emily Gold—highlights the main findings of a national survey of more than 600 police chiefs, state chief judges, elected prosecutors, and probation and parole officials on their views on innovation and leadership

    Learning from Failure
  • Publication

    Innovation in the Criminal Justice System

    by Melissa Labriola, Emily Gold LaGratta, and Julia Kohn

    The results from a survey of over 600 national criminal justice leaders provides a snapshot of the current state of innovation in criminal justice. It seeks to answer such questions as: Is innovation a priority? Are criminal justice leaders aware of emerging research? Do they use research to inform policymaking? What obstacles stand in the way of innovation?

    Learning from Failure
  • Publication

    Leadership and Innovation in Criminal Justice: A National Survey

    This presentation highlights the main findings of a national survey of more than 600 police chiefs, state chief judges, elected prosecutors, and probation and parole officials on their views on innovation and leadership.

    Learning from Failure
  • Publication

    The F-Word: Learning from Failure in Criminal Justice Reform in the USA

    by Greg Berman and Aubrey Fox

    An edited version of the conclusion to "Trial and Error in Criminal Justice Reform: Learning from Failure" (Urban Institute Press 2010). This version appeared in the inaugural issue of Scottish Justice Matters, June 2013.

    Learning from Failure
  • Audio

    Changes 'That Don't Roll Back': Using Technology to Institutionalize Innovation

    Kevin G. Kelly, deputy commissioner of NYC Business Customer Service in the New York City's Mayor Office, discusses how the city uses technology to improve efficiency and radically restructure how businesses interact with government.

    Technology, Learning from Failure
  • Publication

    Innovation in Criminal Justice: A Graduate School Curriculum

    by Aubrey Fox and Emily Gold LaGratta

    "Innovation in Criminal Justice" is a semester-long curriculum for graduate students in the fields of public policy, criminal justice, and law--aiming to promote discussion among the next generation of criminal justice leaders about risk-taking and failure.

    Learning from Failure
  • Publication

    From Chicago to Brooklyn: A Case Study in Program Replication

    by Greg Berman and Emily Gold LaGratta

    “From Chicago to Brooklyn” charts the course of a program’s efforts in Crown Heights, Brooklyn to replicate CeaseFire Chicago, an anti-gun violence model.

    Learning from Failure, Reducing Violence

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This website is funded in whole or in part through a grant from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor any of its components operate, control, are responsible for, or necessarily endorse, this website (including, without limitation, its content, technical infrastructure, and policies, and any services or tools provided).

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