TRANSLATIONAL is the magazine of the Center for Evidence-Based Policy and is published twice a year. TC Magazine seeks to advance the overall goal of the CEBCP by illustrating examples of how research is converted into criminal practice. It is published twice each year. Editor: Cynthia Lum

Winter 2019 (Special Issue 16x) ▪ Translating Research to Policy: Improving Justice for Women and Girls. BY SHEETAL RANJAN AND AMANDA BURGESS-PROCTOR. ▪ Investing in Data to Inform Issues of Justice for Women and Girls. BY LYNN ADDINGTON. ▪ Data-Driven Recommendations Regarding Campus Sexual Misconduct. BY TARA RICHARDS. ▪ Combatting the Cybersexual Victimization of Girls and Women. BY JORDAN NAVARRO AND SHELLY CLEVENGER. ▪ Gender-Based Violence in Central America and Women Asylum Seekers in the United States. BY CECILIA MENJÍVAR AND SHANNON DRYSDALE WALSH. ▪ Testing Sexual Assault Kits Saves Money and Prevents Future Sexual Assaults. BY RACHEL LOVELL, LIUHONG YANG, AND JOANNA KLINGENSTEIN. ▪ Women in the Correctional System. BY JENNIFER COBBINA. ▪ Increasing Female Participation in Policing through Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships. BY ANNE LI KRINGEN. ▪ Women, Peace, and Security Act: Implications for Women in Law Enforcement. BY CARA RABE-HEMP. ▪ Connecting the Dots: Improving Justice for Women and Girls. BY SHEETAL RANJAN AND JOCELYN FONTAINE. Fall 2018 (Issue 15) ▪ Policy Responses to a High Profile School Tragedy. BY ANTHONY PETROSINO, ASHLEY BOAL, AND AUGUSTUS MAYS. ▪ Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program Joins George Mason University’s Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy. BY TOM CARR AND CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ A Primer on Risk Assessments. BY RICHARD BERK. ▪ Utilizing Data and Science to Reduce Serious Injury and Fatality Crashes on Rural Roadways. BY KEN CLARY. ▪ 50 Years Later: The Kerner Commission Legacy. BY LAURIE ROBINSON. ▪ Marking the 50th Anniversary of President Johnson’s Crime Commission. BY TED GEST. ▪ The Distinguished Achievement Award in Evidence-Based Crime Policy 2018 Recipients. JAMES BUEERMANN AND EDMUND MCGARRELL. ▪ 2018 Evidence-Based Policing Hall of Fame Inductees. JEFFERY EGGE AND MICHAEL NEWMAN. ▪ Translating Science in Film: The Science & Entertainment Exchange of the National Academy of Sciences. BY ANN MERCHANT AND ANA SALCEDA. ▪ Proactive Policing’s Effects on Crime and Communities. BY DAVID WEISBURD AND MALAY MAJMUNDAR. ▪ BetaGov Supports Practitioners and Evaluators in Conducting Randomized Control Trials to Test Criminal Justice Programs. BY JUSTIN ESCAMILLA, JESSICA REICHERT, MAUREEN HILLHOUSE, AND ANGELA HAWKEN. Spring 2018 (Issue 14) ▪ The Matrix Demonstration Projects: An Update. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. ▪ From Research to Practice, Two Decades Later: Evidence-Based Policing in Madison, Wisconsin. BY CORY NELSON. ▪ Evidence that Gun Laws Can Reduce Intimate Partner Homicides. BY APRIL M. ZEOLI, ALEXANDER MCCOURT, SHANI BUGGS, SHANNON FRATTAROLI, AND DANIEL W. WEBSTER. ▪ What Role Should Criminologists Play in Criminal Justice Debates? A Push for Public Criminology with a Cautionary Note. BY JOHN A. SHJARBACK. ▪ RESEARCH NOTES FROM THE FIELD, FOR THE FIELD: P-What? A Practitioner Guide to Understanding P-Values.BY JEREMIAH P. JOHNSON. ▪ Collaborative Efforts to Address and Prevent Fatal Traffic Crashes. BY TRACY J. ANDERSON, DANIEL J. FINDLEY, TRAVIS E. BAITY, JOSEPH L. GASKINS, GREG FERRARA, MATTHEW KULIANI, AND PAUL FOLEY. ▪ Using Data to Inform Pretrial Supervision: Strategies from Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. BY JANICE RADOVICK DEAN AND KATHRYN COLLINS. ▪ EVALUATION NOTE: The Importance of Statistical Power in Social and Behavioral Sciences. BY NILOOFAR RAMEZANI. ▪ IN MEMORIAM: Jeffrey A. Roth (1945-2017). BY CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. Fall 2017 (Issue 13) ▪ The Proactive Policing Lab. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. ▪ LEADS Agencies Canada: A New Program to Fix an Old Problem. BY LAURA HUEY. ▪ Beyond the City Limits: Evaluating Court Reforms in Rural and Small-Town Courts. BY ALISSA POLLITZ WORDEN, REVEKA V. SHTEYNBERG, KIRSTIN A. MORGAN, AND ANDREW L.B. DAVIES. ▪ Combating the Opioid Crisis with Treatment Not Arrest: An Examination of an Emerging Police Model. BY JESSICA REICHERT. ▪ SPECIAL FEATURE: The Distinguished Achievement Award in Evidence-Based Crime Policy 2017 Recipients.FEATURING DORIS L. MACKENZIE AND JAMES K. STEWART. ▪ The Misdemeanor Justice Project: Using Data to Guide Criminal Justice Reform. BY JEREMY TRAVIS, PREETI CHAUHAN, AND MEREDITH PATTEN, WITH MICHAEL C. GREEN. ▪ SPECIAL FEATURE: The 2017 Evidence-Based Policing Hall of Fame Inductees. ▪ Trust and Legitimacy Built through Structured, Fair, and Objective Decision Making. BY MICHAEL GROPMAN AND GINA VINCENT. Spring 2017 (Issue 12) ▪ Integrating Research and Researchers into the U.S. Marshals Service. BY DAVID BIERIE AND PAUL DETAR. ▪ New Partnership Uses Research and Data to Improve Understanding of Officer- Involved Shootings. BY JIM BURCH AND BREANNE CAVE. ▪ The Caruth Police Institute: A Model of Embedded Criminology. BY MELINDA D. SCHLAGER AND ROBERT C. DAVIS. ▪ Moving Toward a Research-Based Framework for School Policing. BY JOSEPH M. MCKENNA AND KATHY E. MARTINEZ-PRATHER. ▪ Adding More Police Is Unlikely to Reduce Crime: A Meta-Analysis of Police Agency Size and Crime Research. BY JOHN E. ECK, YONGJEI LEE, AND NICHOLAS CORSARO. ▪ The Role of Consultants in the Applied Research Process. BY JOHN KAPINOS. ▪ Problem-Oriented Policing as a Form of Translational Criminology. BY SUZANNE COBLE AND MICHAEL S. SCOTT. ▪ NIJ’s LEADS Programs. BY GARY CORDNER, GEOFFREY ALPERT, AND MAUREEN MCGOUGH. ▪ Police Research on the Front Lines. BY JASON POTTS. ▪ Research Note: Gaining Access to Security Environments in Norway. BY MARTIN NØKLEBERG. Fall 2016 (Issue 11) ▪ When is Innovation Not Enough? The Importance of Organizational Context in Community Policing. BY CHARLOTTE GILL, DAVID WEISBURD, ZOE VITTER, CLAUDIA GROSS SHADER, TARI NELSON-ZAGAR, AND LINDA SPAIN. ▪ Improving the Practice of Stop and Search in Scotland. BY MEGAN O’NEILL AND ELIZABETH ASTON. ▪ Evidence-Based Youth Mentoring Systems: Constructing Models to Address Systemic Issues Communities Face.BY TARRICK MCGUIRE AND CARLIN CALIMAN. ▪ Training New Scholars to Advance Policing Research and Knowledge Translation. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND NICHOLAS FYFE. ▪ Glasgow’s Community Initiative to Reduce Violence-An Example of International Criminal Justice Policy Transfer Between the US and UK. BY WILLIAM GRAHAM. ▪ Insight Policing-Investigating the Conflict Behavior in Criminal Behavior. BY MEGAN PRICE AND LATRIVIETTE YOUNG. Spring 2016 (Issue 10) ▪ Looking Back and Forward: The Matrix and Its Demonstration Projects. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER ▪ Community Building in Hot Spots: Seattle Neighborhood Group’s Non-Police-Led Crime Prevention Approach. BY CODY W. TELEP, TARI NELSON-ZAGAR, AND JULIE HIBDON ▪ Providing Services in a Rapid Scale-Up Context: The Importance of Research Partnerships. BY SARAH KUCK JALBERT, HOLLY SWAN, AND DANA HUNT ▪ What Research is Needed to Help Family Survivors of Homicide? BY DAN LEVEY, TREVOR FRONIUS, SARAH GUCKENBURG, AND ANTHONY PETROSINO ▪ Collective Action for Trade Transparency against . BY NIKOS PASSAS ▪ Exploring the Evidence-Based Policy Landscape in Community : Results from a Statewide Agency Survey. BY JORDAN M. HYATT AND CHADWICK J. LIBBY ▪ Examining the Success of an Embedded Criminologist Partnership. BY NICOLE FRISCH

Fall 2015 (Issue 9) ▪ Reinventing American Policing: A Seven-Point Blueprint for the 21st Century. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND DANIEL NAGIN. ▪ Using Social Network Analysis to Guide Law Enforcement Strategies. BY ANDREW M. FOX, KENNETH J. NOVAK, AND JOSEPH MCHALE. ▪ Time to Rethink the Age of Adult Court Jurisdiction. BY VINCENT SCHIRALDI AND BRUCE WESTERN. ▪ Promoting Evidence-Based Crime Prevention Policies in Latin America and the Caribbean. BY LAURA JAITMAN AND ROBERTO GUERRERO COMPEÁN. ▪ Improving Academic-Police Partnerships: Observations and Suggestions from a Long-Term Partnership in Portland, Oregon. BY KRIS HENNING AND GREG STEWART. ▪ School Safety Research: Where Do We Go From Here? BY WILLIAM MODZELESKI, CHARLOTTE GILL, AND ANTHONY PETROSINO. Spring 2015 (Issue 8) ▪ The Evolution toward Integrating Science and Evidence in U.S. Department of Justice Agencies—An Insider’s Reflections. BY JAMES H. BURCH II. ▪ Body-Worn Cameras—Rapid Adoption in a Low-Information Environment? BY CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ Summer Jobs and Youth Violence. BY SARA B. HELLER. ▪ Knowledge Transfer in Action: Crime Reduction through a Regulatory Approach. BY JAMES ROYAN AND JOHN E. ECK. ▪ Evidence-Based Policing, “What Works” and Stratified Policing, “How to Make It Work”. BY ROBERTO SANTOS AND RACHEL SANTOS. ▪ Understanding Citizen Support for License Plate Readers. BY LINDA M. MEROLA AND CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ Fulbright@CEBCP: Richard Adams. BY RICHARD ADAMS. Fall 2014 (Issue 7) ▪ Modeling Successful Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships: The International Association of Chiefs of Police Research Advisory Committee. BY ED DAVIS AND LAURIE ROBINSON. ▪ The St. Louis Public Safety Partnership. BY RICHARD ROSENFELD. ▪ Realizing the Potential of Technology for Policing. BY CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER, CYNTHIA LUM, AND JAMES J. WILLIS. ▪ Integrating Evidence to Stop Shootings: New York’s GIVE (Gun-Involved Violence Elimination) Initiative. BY THOMAS P. ABT. ▪ Looking Forward, Looking Back: Reflections on the Value of Evidence-Based Practices in Policing. BY CLARK KIMERER. ▪ Practical Research to Address School Safety: The Secret Service-U.S. Department of Education Safe Schools Initiative. BY WILLIAM MODZELESKI, ANTHONY PETROSINO, SARAH GUCKENBURG, AND TREVOR FRONIUS. ▪ Developing and Sustaining an International Researcher-Practitioner Partnership. BY PETER MARTIN AND GEOFFRETY ALPERT. ▪ Juvenile Lifers: Translating Research through the Documentary Film Lost for Life. BY KATHARINE C. STALEY AND JOSHUA ROFÉ. ▪ Where Social Science Goes Wrong. BY STUART BUCK.

Spring 2014 (Issue 6) ▪ What Is the Future…of ? BY JERRY RATCLIFFE. ▪ Promoting Rigorous Impact Evaluations on Citizen Security in Latin America and the Caribbean. Contributions from the Inter-American Development Bank. BY GUSTAVO BELIZ. ▪ Crime Policy Learning at CAF. The Pilar Initiative. BY DANIEL E. ORTEGA. ▪ Translating Research to Practice and Building Capacity to Use Data, Research, Planning, and Problem-Solving. The Bryne Criminal Justice Innovation Program. BY ELIZABETH GRIFFITH. ▪ Evidence-Based Policing at Work in Smaller Jurisdictions. BY TIM HEGARTY, L. SUE WILLIAMS, SHUAN STANTON, AND WILLIAM CHERNOFF. ▪ Transforming the Police through Science. BY PETER NEYROUD AND DAVID WEISBURD. ▪ Arrests for Misdemeanor Domestic Abuse: A Crucible of Evidence-Based Policing. BY LAWRENCE W. SHERMAN AND EDWARD FLYNN. ▪ Geographies of Missing People. Improving Police Education and Response to Missing Persons. BY OLIVIA STEVENSON, PENNY WOOLNOUGH, AND HESTER PARR. Fall 2013 (Issue 5) ▪ Evidence-Based Policing and Integrity. BY ALEX MURRAY. ▪ Translating the Analysis of Patterns into Police Practice: An Application of a New Spatial Point Pattern Test. BY MARTIN A. ANDRESEN. ▪ This is Not Your Grandparents’ Prejudice: The Implications of the Modern Science of Bias for Police Training. BY LORIE FRIDELL ▪ Is ‘Evidence-Based”? BY CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ Merging Computing and Crime Science: The Development of a Web-Crawling Tool to Investigate . BY MARTIN BOUCHARD. ▪ Case of Places. BY RENEE TATE, THOMAS NEALE, CYNTHIA LUM, AND CHRISTOPHER KOPER. ▪ The Foundation of an Evidence-Based Justice System: The Need for Meaningful Academic and Applied Researcher Partnerships. BY PHILIP STEVENSON, CHARLES KATZ, AND SCOTT DECKER. Spring 2013 (Issue 4) ▪ Bridging the Gap between Science and Criminal Justice Policy: the Federal Role. BY LAURIE ROBINSON. ▪ Innovations in Prosecution and Research: Intelligence-Driven Prosecution. BY DAVID O’KEEFE. ▪ Changing the Culture of Uncommitted Patrol Time: A Work in Progress. BY JAMES DERMODY. ▪ Translating Research into Practice: Oak Park, Illinois, and the National Police Research Platform. BY DENNIS ROSENBAUM, RICK TANKLEY, AND GARY CORDNER. ▪ The Role of Research in Controversial Gun Policy Reform. BY KATHERINE A. VITTES, DANIEL W. WEBSTER, JON S. VERNICK, AND ALICIA SAMUELS. ▪ Beyond the Police: Building “Translation Communities” for Evidence-Based Policing in Seattle. BY CLAUDIA GROSS-SHADER AND CHARLOTTE GILL. ▪ Training Law Enforcement on How to Police the Teen Brain: Improving Police- Youth Interactions. BY LISA H. THURAU. ▪ Bridging the Gap between Research and Child Victimization: The Penn State Justice Center for Research. BY DORIS LAYTON MACKENZIE AND KATHARINE C. STALEY. Fall 2012 (Issue 3) ▪ Translational Criminology. BY JOHN H. LAUB. ▪ Implementing Procedurally Just Approaches to Policing…One Breath at a Time. BY LORRAINE MAZEROLLE, PETER MARTIN, AND SARAH BENNETT. ▪ The Campbell Collaboration and Evidence-Based Crime Prevention. BY MERETE KONNERUP AND CHARLOTTE GILL. ▪ Adapting to Challenges and Change. BY RENEE J. MITCHELL. ▪ Fostering Knowledge Exchange through Collaboration and Participation: The Edinburgh Executive Sessions. BY BILL SKELLY, JOHN HAWKINS, ALISTAIR HENRY, AND NICK FYFE. ▪ Incorporating Research into Daily Police Practices: The Matrix Demonstration Project. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. Winter 2012(Issue 2) ▪ Using Research to Improve Pretrial in Montgomery County, Maryland. BY TIMOTHY MURRAY WITH SHARON TREXLER. ▪ How States can Leverage Research and Analysis to Fight Crime. BY KRISTEN MAHONEY. ▪ Evidence-Based Policing in Practice: The Case of Safe Street Teams in Boston. BY ANTHONY A. BRAGA AND EDWARD F. DAVIS. ▪ From Research to Practice: How Jacksonville, Florida, Sheriff’s Office Institutionalized Results from a Problem-Oriented, Hot Spots Policing Experiment. BY JAMIE ROUSH AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. ▪ What Criminology and Public Health Bring to the Wrestle with Knowledge Translation. BY CATHERINE GALLAGHER AND ADAM DOBRIN. ▪ Science and Passion in Criminal Justice Policy. BY JEREMY TRAVIS. Summer 2011 (Issue 1) ▪ Eight Lessons about Evidence-Based Crime Policy. BY ROBERT BORUCH AND CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ The Challenges of Hot Spots Policing. BY HASSAN ADEN WITH CHRISTOPHER KOPER. ▪ Partnerships in Evidence-Based Policing. BY CLAUDIA GROSS-SHADER. ▪ The Evidence for Place-Based Policing. BY DAVID WEISBURD. ▪ Leading by Evidence and Ethics. BY PETER NEYROUD.

View selected articles from Spring 2013 and Fall 2013 in Spanish, courtesy of our colleagues at the Inter-American Development Bank.