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Publications by Amy L. Solomon on Courts and Policing

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Prisoner Reentry and Community Policing (Research Report)
Nancy G. La Vigne, Amy L. Solomon, Karen Beckman, Kelly Dedel Johnson

This report describes the effects of prisoner reentry on communities and the impact on community safety and public perceptions of crime. The role of the police is examined by outlining the benefits of applying community policing strategies to prisoner reentry and exploring opportunities for police involvement. The report highlights specific examples from the field of how new police roles in prisoner reentry have been put into practice across the nation. A discussion of the potential organizational and community-level challenges to expanding law enforcement's role in reentry follows, along with suggested strategies for overcoming these obstacles and opportunities for advancing police reentry initiatives from both a practical and a policy perspective.

Posted to Web: April 03, 2006Publication Date: April 03, 2006

Prisoner Reentry and Community Policing (Summary)
Karen Beckman, Kelly Dedel Johnson, Amy L. Solomon, Jeremy Travis

The eighth meeting of the Reentry Roundtable, held in May 2004, addressed the nexus between reentry and community policing in the context of public safety. This meeting summary is a synopsis of the two-day discussion among academics, practitioners, service providers, and community leaders convened by the Urban Institute. This document reconstructs the discussion in the chronological order in which it unfolded, including highlights of presentations by the authors of commissioned papers and the discussions that flowed from them. In order to promote the free flow of ideas, it was decided that individuals' names would not be attributed to comments given during the Roundtable discussion.

Posted to Web: November 01, 2004Publication Date: November 01, 2004

Violence in the District of Columbia (Research Report)
Caterina Gouvis Roman, Calvin Johnson, Amy L. Solomon

Violent crime continues to be a major concern in the District of Columbia. In 1999, the District recorded 14,871 violent incidents against 16,372 victims. Nearly 12,000 individuals were assaulted and almost 4,000 robbed. To inform efforts to reduce violence in the city, the Mayor's Office and the Criminal Justice Coordinating Council (CJCC) convened a small "data team" in mid-July, 2000. Composed of representatives from the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia (MPDC), the Urban Institute, the Mayor's Office, and the CJCC, the team was charged with analyzing violent incidents in the city by identifying trends and patterns that characterize violent incidents, victims, and offenders.

Posted to Web: December 01, 2000Publication Date: December 01, 2000

 
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