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| Title |
Funding Organization |
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Abstract |
| American
Indian & Alaska Native Affairs |
Office of Justice Programs |
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http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/americannative/whats_new.htm |
The American Indian and Alaska
Native Affairs Desk, established in the Office of Justice Programs, provides
access to information by federally recognized American Indian and Alaska
native tribes regarding funding opportunities, training and technical assistance,
and other relevant information.
Related topics include DOJ Indian country resources, substance abuse,
corrections and managing offenders, juvenile justice, and violence against
women. |
| American
Indian Suicides in Jail: Can Risk Screening Be Culturally Sensitive? |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/207326.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), June 2005. In a county
detention center in a Northern Plains state where American Indians are the
dominant cultural minority in both the jail and the community at large, the
jail administrator became concerned about the extent of suicidal behavior in
the facility and asked researchers to help find the reason. The research found that the American Indian
concept of mental illness may cause them to interpret questions about this
condition differently, and that a relationship of trust with the interviewer
may produce more openness. In view of
American Indians’ high incarceration rate and risk of suicide, their
experiences could be used to design more culturally sensitive risk assessment
protocols. (NCJ 20736) |
| American
Indians and Crime: A BJS Statistical Profile, 1992-2002 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/aic02.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/aic02.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/aic02.htm |
Bureau of Justice
Statistics (BJS), December 2004. This report presents data on American
Indians in the criminal justice system and reports the rates and
characteristics of violent crimes experienced by American Indians. The
findings include the involvement of alcohol, drugs, and weapons in violence
against Indians. The report describes victim-offender relationships, the race
of those involved in violence against Indians, and the rate of reporting to
police by victims. It discusses the rates of arrest, suspect investigations
and charges filed, and incarceration of Indians for violent crimes. (NCJ
209097) |
| Assessing
Suicide and Risk Behaviors in an Incarcerated American Indian Population:
Investigating Culturally Sensitive Risk Assessment Instruments and Procedures
in a Border Jail, Final Report |
National Institute of Justice -
sponsored |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/199363.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), April 2003. This study determined whether a popular contemporary
suicide risk assessment tool is culturally appropriate for use with American
Indians admitted into a county jail that
borders Indian reservations, as well as whether the use of different suicide
screening protocols results in a difference in the reliability of detainees'
reports of suicide ideation and related risk factors. (NCJ 199363) |
| Behavioral
Sciences Video Resources for Native American, Rural and Other Under-Served
Police Departments |
National Institute of
Justice-sponsored |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/204027.pdf |
|
|
National
Institute of Justice (NIJ), February 2004. This document presents an overview
of the development and evaluation of two stress-related video resources
designed for law enforcement officers and family members within Native
American jurisdictions. The video covers three essential areas related to
understanding and responding effectively to officer stress throughout a
career in law enforcement: hypervigilance, disparity, and trauma. (NCJ
204027) |
| Bitter
Earth: Child Sexual Abuse in Indian Country, Discussion Guide |
Office for Victims of Crime |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/bitter/bitterea.pdf |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/bitter/bitterea.txt |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/bitter/ |
Office
for Victims of Crime (OVC), 1999. This discussion guide is designed as an
educational tool for increasing the awareness of child sexual abuse in Indian
Country among community members and non-Indian service providers. This guide is also intended to be used in
conjunction with a video that deals with child sexual abuse. The discussion guide identifies various
training topics, including community resources targeting child sexual abuse
victims and their families, the tribal leader's role in responding to child
sexual abuse, jurisdictional issues, traditional beliefs and healing
approaches that are culturally relevant, juvenile sex offenders, incest, and
the link between drug abuse and sexual abuse. (NCJ 179105) |
| BJA
Drug Court Clearinghouse Project |
Bureau of Justice Assistance |
http://spa.american.edu/justice/publications/tribal_drugcourts.pdf |
|
|
Bureau of Justice Assistance
(BJA), April 2006. A series of charts that summarize Tribal Drug Court
activity by state and county. |
| Bringing
Victims into Community Policing |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), September 2002. This
publication focuses on the role of crime victims in advancing community
policing. It includes first-responder guides to dealing with victims, a model
policy for the prevention of repeat victimization, and the benefits of
developing relationships among the police, crime victims, and victim
organizations. |
| Bullying
in Schools |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
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Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), July 2006. There is always
concern about school violence, and police have assumed greater responsibility
for helping school officials ensure students’ safety. As pressure increases
to place officers in schools, police agencies must decide how best to
contribute to student safety. This guide provides police with information
about the causes and extent of bullying in schools and recommendations for
developing effective approaches and practices that contribute to student
safety. |
| Census
of Tribal Justice Agencies in Indian Country, 2002 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/ctjaic02.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/ctjaic02.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/ctjaic02.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), December 2005. This report presents detailed information gathered on
tribal law enforcement agencies, tribal courts and services, and criminal
record systems from the 2002 Census of Tribal Justice Agencies in American Indian
jurisdictions. This project represents
one of several components of the BJA's ongoing program to improve justice
statistics and criminal history record information systems in Indian country. The report includes data on the number of
law enforcement agencies and officers; characteristics of tribal courts and
their caseloads; types of available criminal sanctions; and criminal justice
statistics data collection and sharing capacity. (NCJ 205332) |
| The
Changing Federal Role in Indian Country |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/jr000247c.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), April 2001. This journal article discussed the Federal Government’s
revised efforts and approach in handling crime and justice on Indian land
facing an increasing public safety crisis.
American Indians living in the United States are victims of violent
crime at more than twice the rate of all U.S. residents and the number of law
enforcement officers patrolling tribal lands in far behind the per capita
ratio in non-Indian communities. This
article described various Federal Government initiatives and collaborative
efforts to empower tribes to combat crime at the local level. (NCJ 187712) |
| Child
Sexual Abuse on New Mexico Tribal Land 1999-2004 |
Bureau of Justice Assistance |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/212236.pdf |
|
|
Bureau of Justice Assistance
(BJA), November 2004. This study determined whether there were any
differences between reported child sexual abuse cases that originated on New
Mexico tribal lands compared to nontribal areas, based on data from a program
called Safehouse, in Albuquerque, New Mexico, that serves abused, neglected,
and traumatized children and their families.
There were a greater proportion of male victims and female
perpetrators among nontribal cases compared to tribal cases. The majority of tribal cases involved
Native-American offenders and victims.
For nontribal cases, perpetrators were more likely to be parents of
the victim or a boyfriend or girlfriend of a biological parent; among tribal
cases however, perpetrators were more likely to be extended family members.
(NCJ 212236) |
| Children’s
Justice Act Partnerships for Indian Communities |
Office for Victims of Crime |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/factshts/cja/fs000303.pdf |
|
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/factshts/cja/welcome.html |
Office for Victims of Crime
(OVC), June 2003. Since 1989, the Federal Crime Victims Division within the
OVC has provided funding to American Indian tribes through the Children’s
Justice Act (CJA) Partnerships for Indian Communities grant program. These funds are used to help tribes
develop, establish, and operate programs to improve the investigation,
prosecution, and handling of child abuse cases, particularly cases of child
sexual abuse, in a manner that limits additional trauma to the child victim.
(NCJ 201300) |
| Clandestine
Methamphetamine Labs, 2nd edition |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), August 2006. This guide addresses the problem of
clandestine drug labs. Offenders manufacture a variety of illicit drugs in
such labs, including methamphetamine, amphetamines, MDMA (ecstasy), methcathinone,
PCP, LSD, and fentanyl, although methamphetamine accounts for 80 to 90
percent of the labs total drug production. Accordingly, the problem of
clandestine drug labs is closely tied with the problems associated with
methamphetamine abuse (2nd Edition).
|
| The
Collaboration Toolkit: How to Build, Fix and Sustain Productive Partnerships |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), 2001. This toolkit provides practical guidance to
law enforcement agencies as they develop and sustain partnerships that
support community policing. The toolkit will benefit law enforcement
personnel, community-based organizations, educators, youth, government
officials, and others seeking to combine efforts to reduce crime and social
disorder problems. |
| Community
Policing in Action! A Practitioner's Eye View of Organizational Change |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), July 2003. Law enforcement agencies are
traditionally reluctant to reexamine processes that have proven effective,
but what if there’s a better way? This document focuses on nine agencies
determined to reorient their organizations around the principles of community
policing. It details the challenges they faced in implementing a variety of
organizational change projects, and collects the lessons they learned |
| COPS
In Schools: The COPS Commitment to School Safety |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), March 2004. This fact sheet
profiles the training and program requirements for the COPS in Schools (CIS)
Program, which is funded under the U.S. Department of Justice Office of
Community Oriented Policing Services.
Through the CIS Program, almost $715 million has been awarded to more
than 2,900 law enforcement agencies to fund more than 6,300 school resource
officers (SRO). Through SROs working
in partnership with school administrators, community policing strategies are
being implemented to prevent school violence and present educational programs
designed to improve student and schools' safety. |
| COPS
Tribal Resources Fact Sheet |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), 2004. This fact sheet presents the 2004 funding
provisions for the Tribal Resources Grant Program (TRGP) and the Tribal
Hiring Renewal Grant Program (THRGP), which are part of a battery of programs
created by the Office of Community
Oriented Policing Services (COPS) to meet the needs of law enforcement in
Native American communities. |
| Crime
Analysis in America |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), January 2003. This is the
final report of a COPS-funded study conducted by the University of South
Alabama concerning the nation's law enforcement crime analysis units.
Researchers conducted national telephone interviews, mail surveys, and site
visits to develop a comprehensive understanding of the state of crime
analysis in the United States. The researchers also provide recommendations
on ways that local law enforcement agencies can enhance and develop their own
crime analysis capabilities. |
| Crime
Analysis in America Findings and Recommendations |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), April 2003. This guide is a product of the findings
of a recent study conducted by the University of South Alabama documenting
the state of crime analysis in the nation's law enforcement agencies. These
findings and recommendations are intended to inform police managers of the
structural issues to address when considering a crime analysis function
within a community policing context. They are also intended to expose the
current limitations of crime analysis and the policies that those findings
imply. |
| Crime
and the New Mexico Reservation: An Analysis of Crime on Native American Land
(1996-2002), Executive Summary |
National Institute of Justice -
sponsored |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/212239.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), December 2005. This is the executive summary of a study that examined
crime trends among 16 of the 22 Native American tribes in New Mexico. The
crime rates of these reservations were compared to those of Albuquerque, the
state as a whole, and the United States. The data analyzed involved crimes
reported to tribal police at each reservation, which included all criminal
acts committed on specified tribal lands whether or not committed by tribal
members. (NCJ 212239) |
| DCI
America |
|
|
|
http://www.dciamerica.com/ |
DCI America provides (at a cost)
workshops, seminars, conferences, on-site training, and counseling to Native
American organizations and businesses. |
| Development
of Peer Support Programs in Native American and Campus Police Departments |
National Institute of Justice -
sponsored |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/189123.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), July 2001. This report presented information about the development,
implementation, and evaluation of a peer support stress identification and
reduction program in four nontraditional participating law enforcement agencies:
White Mountain Apache Tribal Police Department, Tohono O’Odham Nation Police
Department, the University of Arizona Police Department, and Pima Community
College Department of Safety. The primary purpose of the program was to
demonstrate the utility of peer support principles in Native American and
campus law enforcement agencies. (NCJ 189123) |
| Disorderly
Youth in Public Places |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), July 2006. This guide
provides a general discussion of the problem of disorderly youth in public
places and reviews the factors that contribute to it. The guide also
identifies questions to ask when dealing with a disorderly youth problem,
proposes numerous responses to the problem, and identifies ways to measure
the effectiveness of responses to the problem. |
| Environmental
Assessment for the Methamphetamine Initiative Fact Sheet |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), July 2004. The COPS Office, in accordance with the
National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), completed its most recent
Environmental Assessment in 2003 of the Methamphetamine Initiative. The 2003 Environmental Assessment covers
the use of federal funds for the following grant-funded activities: training
of law enforcement officers; salaries and benefits; purchase of approved
equipment and supplies; interdiction of and removal of laboratories; proper
transportation, storage, and disposal of finished products; and/or preventive
efforts to reduce the spread of the production and use of methamphetamine. |
| Evaluation
of COPS Office Methamphetamine Initiative |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), January 2003. This report presents the methodology
and findings of the evaluation of the Office of Community Oriented Policing
Services' Methamphetamine Initiative for each of the six sites involved. In response to the dramatic increase in
methamphetamine production, sale, and use in many U.S. communities over the
past two decades, COPS created the Methamphetamine Initiative program, which
provided $4.5 million to six U.S. cities to implement antimethamphetamine
projects. |
| Gang
Reference Card for Parents |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
|
|
http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/Default.asp?Item=1383 |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Office of
Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), October 2005. This quick
and easy reference guide provides common warning signs of gang involvement.
Parents are encouraged to familiarize themselves with local gangs symbols,
seek help early, and consider contacting school officials, local law
enforcement, faith leaders, and community organizations for additional
assistance. The Gang Reference Card for Parents is available in English,
Spanish, Hmong, and Vietnamese. |
| Guide
to Using School COP to Address Student Discipline and Crime Problems |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), September 2001. This guide is designed to help
school administrators, police officers assigned to a school, and nonsworn
school security staff reduce student discipline and crime problems using a
new software application called the School Crime Operations Package, or
School COP. School COP is designed to enable users record and store detailed
information about incidents involving student misconduct and crime. |
| Healing
to Wellness Courts: A Preliminary Overview of Tribal Drug Courts |
Office of Justice Programs, Drug
Court Programs Office |
http://www.tribal-institute.org/download/heal.pdf |
|
|
Drug Courts Program Office
(DCPO), July 1999. This paper shows how the drug court is consistent with
traditional Native American tribal concepts of justice and how it can be
adapted to meet the specific needs of individual Native American communities. Alcohol or substance abuse is involved in
more than 90 percent of the criminal cases in most tribal courts. Tribal courts have only recently adapted
and implemented the drug court concept, but they are already achieving
positive results. (NCJ 178907) |
| Impact
Evaluation of STOP Grant Program for Reducing Violence Against Women Among
Indian Tribes |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/186235.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), February 2001. This report presents the methodology and findings of an
impact evaluation of Indian tribal programs intended to assist law
enforcement and prosecution efforts to develop and strengthen strategies to
combat violent crimes against women, as well as strategies for victim
services in such cases. (NCJ 186235) |
| Impact
Evaluation of STOP Grant Program for Reducing Violence Against Women Among
Indian Tribes, Final Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/195174.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), July 2002. This is the final report of an evaluation conducted from
1996 to the summer of 2001 assessing 123 American Indian projects that
received grant funding under the STOP (Service, Training, Officers,
Prosecutors) grant project of the VAIW (Violence Against Indian Women)
program, which is intended to counter domestic violence, sexual assault, and
stalking against Indian women. This
report provides basic descriptive information about who is served by the
programs, the structuring of programs, what services are being provided,
service recipient responses, and level of satisfaction, as well as the
overall impact of the program.
Specific recommendations are provided under the general areas of
coordinated community response, victim services, law enforcement, and
prosecution. (NCJ 195174) |
| Improving
Tribal/Federal Prosecution of Child Sexual Abuse Cases through Agency
Cooperation |
Office for Victims of Crime |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/pdftxt/tribalbult.pdf |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/pdftxt/tribalbult.txt |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/tribal/tribalbult.htm |
Office
for Victims of Crime (OVC), September 1999. This bulletin presents
information intended to improve the cooperation between Tribal and federal
agencies in handling child sexual abuse cases in Native American
society. It describes how close
cooperation between Tribal and federal law enforcement agencies will ensure
effective investigation and prosecution of child abuse cases. (NCJ
172877) |
| Innovations:
Combating Methamphetamine Laboratories and Abuse: Strategies for Success |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), August 2003. This publication
provides a brief summary of the findings of the National Evaluation and
suggests ways that agencies can better deal with their own methamphetamine
problems through a discussion of the COPS Problem-Oriented Policing Guide to
Clandestine Laboratories. |
| Innovations:
Community Policing in Smaller Jurisdictions |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), September 2003. This
Innovations piece highlights specific projects and the progress of American
law enforcement agencies that received COPS grants and the impact COPS helped
make on their communities. Promising Strategies from the Field focuses on
ways COPS grantees operationalize and institutionalize community policing
strategies to reduce crime and improve communication between law enforcement
and the communities in their jurisdictions. This edition, Community Policing
in Smaller Jurisdictions, focuses on innovative solutions developed by 11
small- to mid-sized agencies. |
| Innovations:
Creative Partnerships: Supporting Youth, Building Communities |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), September 2002. This Innovations piece highlights
community policing approaches to developing partnerships with youth. Three
youth-focused programs funded by the COPS Office serve as examples of partnerships
that law enforcement, schools, and community organizations can form to
address issues of juvenile crime and victimization. |
| Interagency
Response to Domestic Violence |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), July 2003. This study
examines one city’s efforts to reduce domestic violence through the
coordinated work of the city police department and a wide range of criminal
justice, social services, and community agencies. This research entailed
study of an interagency domestic violence coalition, the Domestic Violence
Coordinating Committee (DVCC), as well as two
exploratory analyses of the city police department’s domestic violence
data. After presenting the methodology and literature review, the findings of
this study are presented in two parts. |
| Intergenerational
Trauma in Native American Communities: A Framework for Healing |
University of Montana - Division
of Education and Research |
PDF |
Text |
|
University of Montana,
2004. This presentation discusses the
nature and results of trauma in Native American communities. |
| Jails
in Indian Country, 1998 and 1999 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/jic99.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/jic99.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jic99.htm |
Bureau
of Justice Statistics (BJS), July 2000. This report presents findings from
the 1998 and 1999 Surveys of Jails in Indian Country, a complete enumeration
of all 69 confinement facilities operated by tribal authorities or the Bureau
of Indian Affairs (BIA). Highlights include the following: 48 facilities
operated by tribal authorities, 20 operated by the BIA, and 1 privately
operated facility were supervising offenders in Indian country. The 69
facilities had the capacity to hold 2,118 offenders. (NCJ 173410) |
| Jails
in Indian Country, 2002 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/jic02.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/jic02.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jic02.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), November 2003. This document presents findings from the 2002 Survey of
Jails in Indian Country. The survey was an enumeration of all 70 confinement
facilities, detention centers, jails, and other facilities operated by tribal
authorities or the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Highlights include the
following: (1) At midyear 2002, jails in Indian country supervised 2,080
persons; (2) Since 1998, the number of inmates in custody at midyear has
increased by 26 percent, and rated capacity has increased 12 percent; and (3)
35 percent of inmates were being held for a violent offense, 15 percent for
domestic violence offense. (NCJ 198997) |
| Jails
in Indian Country, 2003 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/jic03.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/jic03.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jic03.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), April 2005. This report presents findings from the 2003 Survey of
Jails in Indian Country, an enumeration of all 70 confinement facilities,
detention centers, jails, and other facilities operated by tribal authorities
or the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Highlights include the following: (1) 70
facilities were operating in Indian country, with the capacity to hold 2,226
persons on June 30, 2003; (2) 635 persons were incarcerated on June 20, 2003,
for a violent crime; (3) on June 30, 2003, Indian country facilities held
1,546 adults and 278 juveniles. (NCJ 208597) |
| Jails
in Indian County, 2000 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/jic00.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/jic00.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jic00.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), July 2001. This bulletin presents findings from the 2000 Survey of
Jails in Indian Country, an enumeration of all 69 confinement facilities,
detention centers, jails, and other facilities operated by tribal authorities
or the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Highlights include the following: (1) On
June 30, 2000, Indian country facilities held 1,498 adults and 277 juveniles.
In the 12 months ending June 30, 2000, the number of inmates in custody
increased 9.5 percent. (2) On June 30, 2000, 69 jails in Indian country were
operating at 86 percent of capacity. (NCJ 188156) |
| Jails
in Indian County, 2001 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/jic01.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/jic01.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/jic01.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), May 2002. This report presents findings from the 2001 Survey of Jails
in Indian Country, an enumeration of all 68 confinement facilities, detention
centers, jails, and other facilities operated by tribal authorities or the
Bureau of Indian Affairs. Highlights include the following: (1) 68 facilities
were operating in Indian country, with the capacity to hold 2,101 persons on
June 29, 2001; (2) 16 jails in Indian country funded to undergo expansion,
replacement, or renovation; and (3) In a 1-month period, June 2001,
facilities in Indian Country admitted 9,697 inmates, a 36 percent increase
from June 2000. (NCJ 193400) |
| Justice
in Indian Country: A Process Evaluation of the U.S. Department of Justice
Indian Country Justice Initiative – Final Evaluation Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/181048.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), April 1998. This study
investigates ways to improve coordination among the federal and American
Indian Nations (AIN) justice systems.
The Indian Country Justice Initiative (ICJI) program was developed to
enhance the working relationship among governmental entities to improve the
safety and quality of life for AIN citizens.
The project examined ways to improve coordination among the federal
and AIN justice systems as well as relevant service providers; improve
existing systems, including communications and procedures; strengthen
offender supervision and treatment; expand prevention, intervention, and training
activities; and enforce laws against major crimes, especially those involving
violence. (NCJ 181048) |
| Juvenile
Justice Journal, Volume VIII, No. 2 (American Indian Issue) |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/184747.pdf |
|
http://www.ncjrs.gov/html/ojjdp/jjnl_2000_12/index.html |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), December 2000. This issue of “Juvenile
Justice” provides a compendium of information on preventing and combating
delinquency among American Indian youth.
In an interview, Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell advises that the
greatest challenges facing American Indian youth are overcoming the obstacles
to living a normal childhood, receiving a sound education, and being equipped
to compete for jobs in the modern economy.
The section entitled, “In Brief” contains information on understanding
and responding to youth gangs in Indian country; summaries of publications on
ensuring justice for American Indian children, starting Boys and Girls Clubs
n Indian country, and prevention through empowerment in a Native American
community; and a listing of American Indian-focused web sites. (NCJ 184747) |
| Law
Enforcement Intelligence: A Guide for State, Local, and Tribal Law
Enforcement Agencies |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), November 2004. This intelligence guide was prepared
in response to requests from law enforcement executives for guidance on
intelligence functions in a post-September 11 world. It will help law enforcement
agencies develop or enhance their intelligence capacity and enable them to
fight terrorism and other crimes while preserving community policing
relationships. |
| Law
Enforcement Tech Guide for Small and Rural Police Agencies |
U.S. Dept. of Justice Office of
Community Oriented Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), November 2005. This practical and user-friendly guidebook
is geared to the small and rural police agency, providing strategies, best
practices, recommendations, and ideas for successful IT planning and
implementation. Agencies with minimal personnel and financing can learn how
to implement IT projects from preliminary project planning and project plan
creation to technology acquisition, implementation, and maintenance. This
guidebook complements the Law Enforcement Tech Guide: How to plan, purchase,
and manage technology (successfully!). When used together, they make an
impressive toolset for technology implementation. |
| Law
Enforcement Tech Guide: How to plan, purchase, and manage technology
(successfully!) |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), September 2002. The Law Enforcement Tech Guide
presents best practices in strategic IT planning and procurement, reveals
pitfalls to avoid, and consolidates and expands on various sources of
relevant information currently available. The Guide reviews best practices to
help create a user-friendly product that will provide law enforcement with
the tools they need to successfully achieve their IT goals. |
| Learning
All About Court With "BJ": An Activity Book for Children Going To
Federal or Tribal Court |
Office for Victims of Crime |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/pdftxt/bjver.pdf |
|
|
Office for Victims of Crime
(OVC). This is an activity book for
children going to Federal or Tribal Court. The document contains: (1)
Definitions of terms: court, witness, judge, attorney, jury, defendant, and
victim advocate; (2) Discussions of why people go to court, what various
people do in court and where they sit; (3) words that one might hear in a
court; (4) Getting ready for court; and (5) "What If" questions. In
addition, youngsters preparing for court will find word games, a crossword
puzzle, hidden messages and a word scramble, all built around court
activities and personnel and an Activity Book Answer Sheet. Two pages are set
aside for youthful readers to write about themselves and to draw a picture of
themselves. (NCJ 167252) |
| Measuring
Fear: Strategies for Gauging School Climate and Implementing Mental Health
Recovery Solutions |
University of Montana - Division
of Education and Research |
PDF |
Text |
|
University
of Montana, 2004. This presentation
discusses school and community safety, mental health, technology integration,
and early intervention. |
| Methamphetamine
Initiative Fact Sheet |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), December 2005. This fact sheet gives information
about how COPS grants have helped to combat the spread of Methamphetamine use
and production. Since 1998, COPS has
invested more than $385 million nationwide to stop this problem In fiscal year 2005, COPS awarded nearly
$53 million to fight the escalating Methamphetamine problem. |
| National
Center for Rural Law Enforcement |
|
|
|
http://www.ncrle.net/ |
The National Center for Rural
Law Enforcement (NCRLE), a division of the Criminal Justice Institute,
University of Arkansas System, is a university-based organization committed
to helping rural law enforcement agencies meet this challenge. |
| National
Congress of American Indians |
|
|
|
http://www.ncai.org/ |
The
National Congress of American Indians (NCAI) informs the public and Congress
on the governmental rights of American Indians and Alaska Natives. Now
serving as the major national tribal government organization, NCAI is
positioned to monitor federal policy and coordinated efforts to inform
federal decisions that affect tribal government interests. |
| National
Indian Child Welfare Association |
|
|
|
http://www.nicwa.org/ |
The National Indian Child
Welfare Association (NICWA) is the most comprehensive source of information
on American Indian child welfare and works on behalf of Indian children and
families. NICWA provides public policy, research, and advocacy; information and
training on Indian child welfare; and community development services to a
broad national audience including tribal governments and programs, state
child welfare agencies, and other organizations, agencies, and professionals
interested in the field of Indian child welfare. |
| National
Indian Justice Center |
|
|
|
http://nijc.indian.com/index.html |
The National Indian Justice
Center, established in 1983 through the efforts of the National American
Indian Court Judges Association, the American Indian Lawyer Training Program,
and the Bureau of Indian Affairs, has developed and conducted effective education
programs via regional training, on-site training and conferences for tribal
centers, tribal government, law enforcement, social service, medical
personnel, victim assistance programs, and other interests throughout Indian
country. The NIJC has produced 39
training manuals, 18 videos, and other
training materials. |
| National
Native American Law Enforcement Association |
|
|
|
http://www.nnalea.org/ |
The National Native American Law
Enforcement Association (NNALEA) is a nonprofit organization founded in 1993
in Washington, D.C., and incorporated in the state of Delaware. The mission
of NNALEA is to promote and foster mutual cooperation among American Indian
law enforcement officers/agents/personnel, their agencies, tribes, private
industry, and the public. |
| National
Tribal Justice Resource Center |
|
|
|
http://www.tribalresourcecenter.org/ |
The
National Tribal Justice Resource Center (NTJRC) is the largest and most
comprehensive site dedicated to tribal justice systems, personnel, and tribal
law. The NTJRC is the central national clearinghouse of information for
Native American and Alaska Native tribal courts, providing both technical
assistance and resources for the development and enhancement of tribal
justice system personnel. Programs and services developed by the NTJRC are
offered to all tribal justice system personnel -- whether working with
formalized tribal courts or with tradition-based tribal dispute resolution
forums. |
| OJJDP’s
Program of Research for Tribal Youth |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/fs200110.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/ojjdp/fs200110.txt |
|
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), April 2001. This fact sheet summarizes
OJJDP’s tribal youth research activities, which are designed to provide
empirical evidence about juvenile justice and delinquency prevention
practices and their impact on tribal youth.
TYP provides funds directly to tribal communities to develop programs
that help prevent and control juvenile delinquency, including violent crime,
and improve tribal juvenile justice systems. (NCJ 187530) |
| OJJDP’s
Tribal Youth Initiatives |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/193763.pdf |
|
http://www.ncjrs.gov/html/ojjdp/193763/contents.html |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), May 2003. This bulletin describes the efforts
of the OJJDP to assist tribal communities in addressing risk factors of
delinquency. Tribal communities lack
the available resources for families and youth, as well as for the social
service and law enforcement agencies serving them. OJJDP attempts to address these problems by
enhancing Indian country law enforcement and improving the quality of life in
tribal communities through its Tribal Youth Initiatives. This bulletin highlights OJJDP’s current
activities, under the Tribal Youth Initiative in five program areas.
(NCJ193763) |
| People
with Mental Illness |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), May 2006. This guide describes the challenges
police face when dealing with people with mental illness. Police officers
encounter people with mental illness in many different types of situation, in
roles that include criminal offenders, disorderly persons, missing persons,
complainants, victims and persons in need of care. This guide is an essential
tool for local law enforcement to analyze their local problems associated
with people with mental illness and reviews responses to these problems based
on evaluative research and police practice. |
| Police-Community
Partnerships to Address Domestic Violence |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), March 2006. Through the community policing
philosophy and its practices, some law enforcement agencies are seeking to
improve their effectiveness in dealing with the problem of domestic violence
by forming police-community partnerships to enhance their response options.
PERF, with funding from the COPS Office, explored the nature, function, and
impact of such police-community partnerships. The research shows that
partnerships between police and community partners have made improvements in
the way that agencies communicate with each other and in how they focus their
energies on improving the safety of victims of domestic violence. This
publication highlights such initiatives around the country that can be
replicated to better address domestic violence. |
| Policing
on American Indian Reservations |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/180774.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), February 2000. This paper reports on a study that took a broad look at
policing in Indian country and evaluated the prospects for community policing
on American Indian reservations. The broad look at policing in Indian country
was designed to produce a better understanding of the many arrangements for
administering reservation police departments, an initial assessment of the
challenges facing Indian policing, and the identification of policing
approaches that might be successful in responding to the increasing crime
problem on Indian reservations. (NCJ 180774) |
| Policing
on American Indian Reservations, Revised |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/188095.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/nij/188095.txt |
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), September 2001. This study takes a broad look at policing in Indian
country. The study is an attempt to
better understand the many arrangements for administering reservation police
departments, to develop an initial assessment of the challenges facing Indian
policing, and to identify policing strategies and approaches that might be
successful in responding to the growing crime problem in Indian country. (NCJ
188095) |
| Problem-Solving
Tips: A Guide to Reducing Crime and Disorder through Problem-Solving Partnerships |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), July 2006. The guide serves
as a reference for those in all stages of implementing the problem-solving
approach. It contains insights into every stage of the process, most of which
are drawn from the experience of law enforcement officers in the field. The
guide relies on the SARA model: scanning, analyzing, response, and assessment
of problems. |
| Promising
Practices and Strategies to Reduce Alcohol and Substance Abuse among American
Indians and Alaska Natives |
Office of Justice Programs |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/americannative/promise.pdf |
|
|
Office of Justice Programs
(OJP), August 2000. This publication highlights effective solutions developed
within the tribal community that combine western and traditional approaches,
building on the strengths of respective Indian communities. The three sections of the publication
provide information on current programs, literature, and suggested reading
and resources. (NCJ 183930) |
| Public
Law 280 and Law Enforcement in Indian Country—Research Priorities |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/209839.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), December 2005. This report suggest research priorities for examining
the impact of Federal Public Law 83-280 (PL 280), which was enacted in 1953
to transfer federal jurisdiction over offenses involving Indians in Indian
country to six states while giving other states an option to assume such
jurisdiction. (NCJ 209839) |
| Results
from the Southern Ute Indian Community Safety Survey, Final Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bjs/grants/212237.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), December 2005. This study of the prevalence and characteristics of
crime on the Southern Ute Indian reservation in Colorado was conducted to provide the Tribal Council with recommendations
regarding culturally appropriate crime control policy. (NCJ 212237) |
| Sacred
Circle |
Administration for Children and
Families, U.S. Department of Health and Human Services |
|
|
http://www.sacred-circle.com/ |
National
Resource Center to End Violence Against Native Women. The web site offers
training and technical assistance resources and schedules plus national links
for services to combat violence against Native American women. |
| School
Vandalism and Break-Ins |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), July 2005. This manual provides guidelines for
assessing the problem of school vandalism and break-ins locally and
developing effective responses. A
discussion of school vandalism and break-ins notes factors that contribute to
the problem, including offender characteristics, motivations, times, and
targets. Offenders are typically young
males acting in small groups under a range of motivations that include theft,
stopping school operations, protesting school policies, and expressing of frustration or rage |
| SRO
Performance Evaluation: A Guide to Getting Results |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), August 2005. The evaluation captures the lessons
learned from a COPS-funded, 2-year pilot project conducted by Circle
Solutions, Inc. The result is a step-by-step guide to help law enforcement
and school personnel use school resource officers (SRO) effectively. To
better address school crime and disorder, it also provides guidance on how to
match the SRO’s actual performance to their evaluations. |
| Street
Gangs and Interventions: Innovative
Problem Solving With Network Analysis |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office
of Community Oriented Policing Services (COPS), September 2005. This
Innovations piece reviews prevention, intervention, suppression, and
comprehensive strategies to address this issue of gangs and provides examples
of each. It also offers a case study of problem analysis in Newark, New
Jersey through the Greater Newark Safer Cities Initiative. This paper
discusses the unique utility of network analysis in the resulting problem
analysis and emphasizes the important role of an academic research partner.
Finally, the piece considers the importance of sustainability with regard to
problem analysis. |
| Strengthening
and Rebuilding Tribal Justice Systems: Learning From History and Looking
Toward the Future, Executive Summary |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/210892.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), March 2005. This is the executive summary of a process evaluation of
the comprehensive Indian Resources for community and Law Enforcement (CIRCLE)
Project, which provided incentives and opportunities for Indian tribes to
improve their justice system components.
CIRCLE, which began in 1998, involves a partnership between the U.S.
Department of Justice (USDOJ) and the Northern Cheyenne Tribe, Oglala Sioux
Tribe, and Pueblo of Zuni for the purpose of strengthening those tribes’
justice systems. (NCJ 210892) |
| Strengthening
and Rebuilding Tribal Justice Systems: Learning From History and Looking
Towards the Future, Final Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/210893.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), March 2005. This is the final report of a process evaluation of the
CIRCLE. The improvements begun include
strengthening of agency performance, the creation of expansion of support
programs for tribal courts, and the development of a culturally based
framework for rethinking the design of criminal justice institutions and
agencies. (NCJ 210893) |
| Tackling
Crime and Other Public Safety Problems: Case Studies in Problem - Solving |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
|
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), September 1999. This compilation provides detailed
descriptions of nearly 50 problem-oriented policing efforts dealing with a
wide variety of specific crime and social disorder problems. Editor’s notes
are included after each section detailing the noteworthy aspects of each
effort. |
| Training
and Technical Assistance for Indian Nation Juvenile Justice Systems |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/fs99105.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/fs99105.txt |
|
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), April 1999.
The fact sheet describes the funding of four Indian Nations between
fiscal years 1992 and 1995 to develop culturally relevant community-based
programs to address the needs of young Indian offenders and their
families. OJJDP funded a technical
assistance program to assist Indian Nations in the design, development, and
implementation of such programs. The
goal of this ongoing technical assistance program is to help equip Indian
Nation governments with the necessary information and tools to develop or
enhance comprehensive, systemwide approaches to reduce juvenile delinquency,
violence, and victimization, and increase the safety of their communities. |
| Tribal
Court Appointed Special Advocate (CASA) Project |
|
|
|
http://www.casanet.org/program-services/tribal/ |
The
Tribal Court CASA Project was started in 1994 to assist in the development
and enhancement of Tribal Court programs that provide volunteer advocacy for
abused or neglected Native American children. The goal of National CASA is to
increase the number of Indian children who are receiving culturally sensitive
representation through indigenous CASA programs in Tribal Court proceedings.
The Project is advised by the Tribal Court Advisory Committee, whose purpose
is to review and consult with National CASA on the development of Tribal
Court programs, the best methods to assist the Tribal Court programs, and the
best methods for adapting CASA to meet the needs of Native American
communities. |
| Tribal
Court CASA: A Guide to Program Development |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/fs200209.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/ojjdp/fs200209.txt |
|
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), June 2002. This fact sheet describes the
Tribal Court CASA Project and offers guidance on planning a quality program,
working with volunteers, and managing the program. It also lists grant programs
that offer funding for Tribal Court CASA programs and provides contact
information for National CASA and the Tribal Law and Policy Institute. (NCJ
196400) |
| Tribal
Domestic Violence Case Law: Annotations for Selected Tribal Cases Related to
Domestic Violence |
Tribal Law and Policy Institute |
http://www.tribal-institute.org/download/Tribal%20DV%20Compendium.pdf |
|
|
Tribal Law and Policy Institute,
2003. This compendium is designed to assist tribal judicial officers in
understanding how some tribal governments have handled certain legal issues
within the context of domestic violence cases. This compendium does not include every
tribal court opinion on domestic violence.
It is limited to those tribal court opinions that have been published
and disseminated to the public, including cases found in the Indian Law
Reporter, the Oklahoma Tribal Court Reports, and the Northwest Regional
Appellate Court Reporter, as well as cases available on the internet. |
| Tribal
Healing to Wellness Courts: The Key Components |
Tribal Law and Policy
Institute/U.S. Dept. of Justice, Bureau of Justice Assistance |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/bja/188154.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/bja/188154.txt |
|
Bureau of Justice Assistance
(BJA), April 2003. This booklet explains each of 10 key components of Tribal
Healing to Wellness Courts (drug courts), followed by several recommended
practices that provide guidance for implementing each component. (NCJ 188154) |
| Tribal
Law & Policy Institute |
|
|
|
http://www.tribal-institute.org/lists/tlpi.htm |
The
Tribal Law and Policy Institute is a Native American-owned and operated
nonprofit corporation that designs and delivers education, research,
training, and technical assistance programs that promote the enhancement of
justice in Indian country and the health, well-being, and culture of Native
American peoples. |
| Tribal
Law Enforcement, 2000 |
Bureau of Justice Statistics |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/pdf/tle00.pdf |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pub/ascii/tle00.txt |
http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/tle00.htm |
Bureau of Justice Statistics
(BJS), January 2003. This report presents information on the characteristics
of tribally operated law enforcement agencies in the United States, including
personnel, services, and functions. These selected findings include a special
section on crime in Indian country. Agency data are taken from the 2000
Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies. (NCJ 197936) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Chickasaw Nation Case Study |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/206037.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), January 2002. This report documents the activities implemented by the
Chickasaw Nation, along with their impact, under two grant periods of the U.
S. Justice Department’s initiative of Tribal Strategies Against Violence
(TSAV), which is a federal-tribal partnership intended to reduce crime,
violence, and drug demand in seven American Indian tribes. This evaluation’s goals were to document
how TSAV strategies had evolved and how comprehensive strategies had been
implemented. Another evaluation goal
was to analyze how differences in local cultures, physical environments, or
government structures at the tribal site may have affected program implementation. TSAV activities had reduced drunk driving,
drug use, and gang activity. (NCJ 206037) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Cross-Site Evaluation Report, Executive Summary |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/195791.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), January 2002. This document evaluates the Tribal Strategies Against
Violence (TSAV) initiative. The TSAV
initiative was designed to empower American Indian tribes to improve the quality
of life in their communities by fostering strategic planning to identify
community problems and to implement locally developed partnerships for
addressing those problems. The more
successful a tribe was in bringing together critical tribal criminal justice
entities as partners, the more successful it was in addressing a broad range
of crime and violence issues. (NCJ 195791) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Cross-Site Evaluation Report, Full Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/195790.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), January 2002. This document evaluates the Tribal Strategies Against
Violence (TSAV) initiative. The
ultimate purpose was the development of reservation and community-wide
strategies to reduce crime, violence, and substance abuse. Findings showed that changes in the Tribal
Codes and Tribal Court Systems occurred for all three of the Tribes that
their own courts with jurisdiction over criminal, civil, and juvenile justice
issues on their reservations. Most
sites brought about key changes in their support systems for crime and
violence victims and perpetrators. (NCJ 195790) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux Tribes Case
Study |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/206034.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), June 2004. This report
documents the activities implemented by the Fort Peck Assiniboine and Sioux
Tribes, along with their impact, under three grant awards of the U.S. Justice
Department’s initiative of Tribal Strategies Against Violence (TSAV). The evaluation found that significant
progress was made in collaborating with nontribal entities, notably in
interaction with several public schools and police departments. There was little or no statistical evidence
to document TSAV’s impact on crime or violence; however, there was evidence
that the project was effective in building community awareness about
violence, fostering cooperation among the TSAV partners, identifying
additional funding to apply to targeted problems, improving services of TSAV
partner agencies, and enhancing the system for dealing with domestic
violence. (NCJ 206034) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa
Indians Case Study |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/206035.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), June 2004.This report documents the activities implemented by the
Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, along with their impact,
under two grant periods from the U.S. Justice Department’s initiative of Tribal
Strategies Against Violence (TSAV).
The TSAV partners made substantial structural changes to the
reservation’s criminal justice system through the enactment of tribal law
related to domestic violence, inhalant and other drug abuse, and through the
issuance of zero-tolerance laws/policies as well as police who deal with
sexual harassment among tribal employees and nonsmoking in tribal facilities.
(NCJ 206035) |
| Tribal
Strategies Against Violence: Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians Case
Study |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/206036.pdf |
|
|
National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), June 2004. This report document the activities implemented by the
Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians, along with their impact, under two
grant periods from the U.S. Justice Department’s initiative of Tribal Strategies
Against Violence (TSAV). The
evaluators concluded that the Turtle Mountain Band TSAV program faithfully
represented the TSAV’s envisioned institutionalization of a community-wide
problem solving process and that it deserves to be a model for other tribes.
(NCJ 206036) |
| Tribal
Youth Program |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/fs99108.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/fs99108.txt |
|
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), April 1999.
This fact sheet describes the OJJDP's Tribal Youth Program that is
dedicated to juvenile justice delinquency prevention and control and juvenile
justice system improvement in Native American communities. (NCJ 176218) |
| Tribal-Community
Police Teams |
|
|
|
http://www.tribaltraining.com/training_tribal_.php |
Tribal-Community Police
Teams: This 2-day training is designed
to bring together tribal government, community members, and law enforcement
to learn techniques on how to empower their communities to ethically identify
and solve community problems through the use of community policing concepts,
advocacy, and problem-solving. Topics include: Community policing principles;
team building; community-police relationships; creating collaborative
partnerships; problem-solving through identification, analysis, and response
development; facilitating change; and action planning. During this training,
relationships are formed and teams return to their respective
tribes/communities to implement their action plans applying problem-solving
and collaborative partnership strategies. |
| United
National Indian Tribal Youth, Inc. |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/yfs00107.pdf |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles1/ojjdp/yfs00107.txt |
|
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), August 2001. This paper describes the
history, structure, and current activities of United National Indian Tribal
Youth, Inc. (UNITY). UNITY is a nonprofit,
national network organization that promotes personal development,
citizenship, and leadership among American Indian/Alaska Native youth. Underpinning the UNITY philosophy is the
belief that the most effective way to achieve positive and lasting change
among American Indian/Alaska Native youth is to prepare them to become
informed and contributing members of their tribes, villages, communities,
states, and nation. (NCJ 189412) |
| United
States Code: Indian Child Protection and Family Violence Prevention |
Cornell Law School , Legal
Information Institute |
|
|
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/html/uscode25/usc_sup_01_25_10_34.html |
Cornell Law School. Legal
Information Institute. Describes and interprets each section of the Indian
Child and Family Violence Prevention code. |
| Using
Analysis for Problem-Solving: A Guidebook for Law Enforcement |
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services |
PDF |
Text |
|
Office of Community Oriented
Policing Services (COPS), August 2006. This guide provides law enforcement
practitioners with a resource for conducting problem analysis. It summarizes
many challenges of the analysis phase of the problem-solving process. This
book builds on the foundation presented in Problem-Solving Tips: A Guide to
Reducing Crime and Disorder Through Problem-Solving Partnerships, and
complements the Problem-Oriented Guides for Police Series. The guide also
identifies tools for analysis and proposes tips for effectively using each
tool. |
| Victim
Programs to Serve Native Americans |
Office for Victims of Crime |
|
http://www.ncjrs.gov/txtfiles/nata.txt |
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Office for Victims of Crime
(OVC), February 1992. This report describes the programs provided by the
Office for Victims of Crime (OVC) of the Department of Justice that serve
Native American crime victims and discusses the effects that the programs are
having in American Indian communities.
OVC activities in American Indian communities have included
establishment of victim assistance programs on reservation, and the
establishment of programs to improve the investigation and prosecution of
child sexual abuse cases in Indian communities. (NCJ 133963) |
| Victim
Services: Promising Practices in Indian Country |
Tribal Law & Policy
Institute, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, Office of
Victims of Crime |
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/victimsrvsindian_country2004/729404.pdf |
|
http://www.ovc.gov/publications/infores/victimsrvsindian_country2004/welcome.html |
Office for Victims of Crime
(OVC), November 2004. This booklet describes 12 programs of services for
crime victims being conducted b various Indian tribes throughout the United
States. Information on each program includes names, when each was established, the
service area, the population served, source of funding, and contact
information. A brief program
description is followed by discussion of particular services, their cultural
relevance, and keys to success. Other
tribal victim services programs provide various services to victims of
domestic violence, sexual assault, homicide, child sexual abuse, child
neglect, and drunk driving. (NCJ 207019) |
| Violence
Against Indian Women, Final Revised Report |
National Institute of Justice |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/198828.pdf |
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National Institute of Justice
(NIJ), January 2003. This study explored the patterns of violence against
women in 15 Native American communities and examined the readiness of these
communities to develop and implement effective violence-prevention efforts. The project began with a survey of the
communities to determine the extent to which western Native American
communities were aware of violence against women as a problem, had access to
intervention and prevention programs that targeted violence against women,
and had actually used resources. The
project concluded that effective and sustainable community mobilization to
combat violence against women must be based on the involvement of multiple
systems and the use of within-tribal community resources and strengths. (NCJ
198828) |
| Youth
Gangs in Indian Country |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention |
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/ojjdp/202714.pdf |
|
http://www.ncjrs.gov/html/ojjdp/jjbul2004_3_1/contents.html |
Office of Juvenile Justice and
Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP), January 2004. This report presents data
regarding the presence and effect of youth gang activity in Indian country
and an overview of programmatic responses to the problem. It also describes the
nature and makeup of youth gangs in Indian country and compares the findings
to those from a national sample and a comparison sample. The study provides a
detailed national assessment of gang activity in Indian country communities
that can guide effective responses to the problem. (NCJ202714) |
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