Expressandstar.com, 02.06.2014Study reveals impact of burglary
One in four victims of burglary have experienced mental health issues, such as anxiety or symptoms of depression, after a break-in, according to new research.
New York Times, 02.06.2014Before Brief, Deadly Spree, Trouble Since Age 8
Elliot O. Rodger’s Killings in California Followed Years of Withdrawal
LOS ANGELES — It was the summer of 1999, and the parents of Elliot O. Rodger were battling over the boy’s deep and puzzling psychological problems as they struggled through a divorce.
ADAM NAGOURNEY, MICHAEL CIEPLY, ALAN FEUER and IAN LOVETT
EurekAlert!, 02.06.2014Nearly 1 in 8 American children are maltreated before age 18
By the time they reach age 18, about 12% of American children experience a confirmed case of maltreatment in the form of neglect, physical, sexual, or emotional abuse, according to a new study by researchers at Yale University.
EBONY.com, 02.06.2014Scholars Weigh In on Ending Mass Incarceration
The Hamilton Project at Brookings hosted a panel at the National Press Club on how the solve the nation's prison crisis
Medical News, 02.06.2014Youths who have committed homicide 'show differences in brain structure'
A new study published in the journal NeuroImage: Clinical suggests that youths between the ages of 12 and 18 who have committed homicide have significantly different brain structures, compared with other teenage criminals who have not committed homicide.
theguardian.com, 02.06.2014Sydney pub and club assaults drop dramatically but violence at home is up
Assaults at Kings Cross have fallen by 30.5% in the past two years but there has been a 2.5% rise in violent assaults at home
Research Magazine, 02.06.2014Crime story
Brian Tarran meets David Canter, a founding father of investigative psychology, who went from studying biscuit purchases to helping police catch murderers and rapists.
Brian Tarran
Police Oracle, 03.06.2014Terrorist groups: Dealing with membership
Understanding the culture, history and symbols of an outlawed organisation can pay dividends in identifying suspects, writes Andrew Staniforth.
Andrew Staniforth
The Verge, 04.06.2014If violence is in your genes, should courts be more lenient?
A debate is raging, but that hasn't stopped lawyers from using genetic evidence in criminal trials
Arielle Duhaime-Ross
Reason, 04.06.2014Criminalizing Sex Work Clients: the Hot New Anti-Prostitution Strategy That Works About as Well as the Old Strategy
Medical Xpress, 05.06.2014Alcohol-related terms can increase aggression
New psychology research shows that exposing people to alcohol-related words can influence aggressive behaviour in ways similar to actually consuming alcohol.
theguardian.com, 05.06.2014Britain's first secret trial: this way lies trouble
If we allow hard-won freedoms to be discarded without a fight, what is to stop the powerful coming for other rights?
Owen Jones
The Guardian, 06.06.2014Leftover Women: The Resurgence of Gender Inequality in China – review
Leta Hong Fincher has written a shocking account of the way women are treated in the People's Republic
Aljazeera.com, 06.06.2014Boko Haram and defining the 'al-Qaeda network'
The presence of a British-born man in Boko Haram's ranks proves that the group's appeal is not confined to Nigeria.
Robin Simcox
Police Oracle, 06.06.2014Terrorist grooming: 'Greater evidence base needed'
People identified as being vulnerable to radicalisation "are not making it to prison," says academic.
Cliff Caswell
The Times of Israel, 07.06.2014Brussels attack underscores threat of returning jihadists
European Jewish institutions left to reckon with danger of Islamist extremists coming home from Syria with new skills and increased fervor
Cnaan Liphshiz
NEWS.com.au, 07.06.2014Attacks on police in NSW have risen 13 per cent in two years
IT SEEMS while we are better behaved towards each other we are turning against the police in greater numbers.
University of California, 09.06.2014Does 'free will' stem from brain noise?
Our ability to make choices — and sometimes mistakes — might arise from random fluctuations in the brain's background electrical noise, according to a recent study from the Center for Mind and Brain at the University of California, Davis.
Police Oracle, 11.06.2014Prevent, and tackling radicalisation in schools
Identifying radicalised individuals of school age is a complex task – but must be tackled, says Andrew Staniforth.
Andrew Staniforth
Police Oracle, 12.06.2014The hazardous task of protecting the vulnerable
Chief officers must understand the pressures faced by operational commanders in a critical area, says Irene Curtis.
Irene Curtis
Houston Chronicle, 13.06.2014Temple: Don't be so quick to blame mental illness in shootings
Mentally ill may be easy to blame, but they're rarely violent
Jeff Temple
Science Codex, 13.06.2014Gun violence and mental illness: Study addresses perception vs. reality
Recent mass killings in Isla Vista, California, and elsewhere have again raised concern among lawmakers and the media about the possible connection between mental illness and gun violence. A new study sets the record straight and recommends an evidence-based approach to limiting firearms fatalities.
Police Oracle, 13.06.2014Misconduct: 'Strong case for public hearings'
Officers must accept that they are now subject to increased scrutiny, says academic and former chief.
Cliff Caswell
Police Oracle, 13.06.2014Training issues, and tackling disability hate crime
Progress in this area has been made – but the overall picture remains patchy, writes Nick Alatti.
Nick Alatti
Deccan Chronicle June, 14.06.2014Elderly women more vulnerable to abuse than men, says report
New Delhi: Elderly women face more abuse than their male counterparts in metro cities than non-metro cities, a survey on the existence of elder abuse in urban India has found.
Truth-Out, 14.06.2014Myth vs. Fact: Violence and Mental Health
After mass shootings, like the ones these past weeks in Las Vegas, Seattle and Santa Barbara, the national conversation often focuses on mental illness. So what do we actually know about the connections between mental illness, mass shootings and gun violence overall?
Lois Beckett
The Japan Times, 14.06.2014Southeast Asia now biggest global danger zone for piracy: U.N.
GENEVA – Southeast Asia has overtaken the Horn of Africa as the world’s hot spot for pirate attacks after concerted international efforts to police the waters off Somalia, the U.N. said Thursday.
MyFoxAL, 16.06.2014Delinquent teens more likely to die violently as adults
MONDAY, June 16, 2014 (HealthDay News) -- Delinquent youth face a significantly increased risk for a violent death when they're adults, a new study finds.
Mother Jones, 17.06.2014Did This City Bring Down Its Murder Rate by Paying People Not to Kill?
A controversial experiment in Richmond, California, may have slashed street violence—or maybe it just got lucky.
Tim Murphy
The Guardian, 17.06.2014Here the Camorra has lost: Italian mayor offers new dawn for mafia town
Renato Natale's election brings residents hope Casal di Principe will finally be able to emerge from the shadow of organised crime
Lizzy Davies
theguardian.com, 17.06.2014The digital arms race – and what is being done to fight it
With surveillance-security software on the rise, the fight against the use of espionage malware on citizens is gathering steam
Tom Brewster
Phys.Org, 17.06.2014Historians become scientists to reveal the real reason for a decline in violent crime
A scientific analysis of 20 million words recorded during 150 years of criminal trials at London's Old Bailey reveals how changes in culture rather than law helped to reduce violent crime, according to a co-authored University of Sussex study.
EurekAlert!, 17.06.2014Minimizing belief in free will may lessen support for criminal punishment
Exposure to information that diminishes free will, including brain-based accounts of behavior, seems to decrease people's support for retributive punishment, according to research published in Psychological Science, a journal of the Association for Psychological Science.
New Statesman, 17.06.2014Is this the beginning of the end of the war on women’s bodies?
The recent summit in London has grabbed headlines, but whether we have now reached a turning point in the fight to end sexual violence in conflict remains to be seen.
Rebecca Omonira-Oyekanmi
GoodTherapy.org, 18.06.2014New Research Aims to Explain Unethical Group Behavior
Contributed by Zawn Villines, GoodTherapy.org Correspondent
The Atlantic, 18.06.2014Confusing Marriage and Violence Prevention
A problematic argument for getting married
Jonathan Stray
EconoMonitor, 18.06.2014The Rise of Cyber-Security Blackwaters
Recently, the Department of Justice launched its first criminal cyber espionage case against alleged Chinese hackers. The case depends on new cyber-security start-ups – the successors of Blackwater.
Indiana University, 18.06.2014Exposure to TV violence related to irregular attention and brain structure
INDIANAPOLIS -- Young adult men who watched more violence on television showed indications of less mature brain development and poorer executive functioning, according to the results of an Indiana University School of Medicine study published online in the journal Brain and Cognition.
EurekAlert!, 18.06.2014Counterterrorism, ethics, and global health
A new article traces the ways that the war on terror is incorporating medicine into warfare, threatening the health of local populations, increasing global health disparities, and causing profound moral distress among humanitarian and health care workers
RedOrbit, 19.06.2014Mental Health Patients More Than Twice As Likely To Be Victims Of Homicide Than The General Public
Huffington Post, 19.06.2014What the Slender Man Case Reveals About the Juvenile Criminal Justice System
Tina Freiburger, Associate professor and chair of the Criminal Justice Department at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
Information (DK), 19.06.2014NSA ‘third party’ partners tap the Internet backbone in global surveillance program
’Third parties’ give NSA access to international fiber-optic cables, sharing massive amounts of phone and Internet data, new Snowden documents show. Germany and, by all accounts, Denmark, are among the partners in the NSA mass surveillance program codenamed RAMPART-A.
Arizona Daily Star, 20.06.2014Explaining what's happening in Iraq
Maggy Zanger is a professor of practice at the University of Arizona School of Journalism and an affiliated faculty member of the UA Center for Middle Eastern Studies. She conducted research in Iraq before the U.S. invasion and lived there in 2003 and 2004 training Iraqi journalists.
Maggy Zanger
New York Times, 20.06.2014Money Remains Crime-Fighting Tool for New York Police
Amid advances in data-driven policing and forensic science, one traditional crime-solving tool has remained a constant for the New York Police Department: money.
ERIN TENNANT
WalesOnline, 22.06.2014'He was one of the best boys a mother could ever want': Mother of third young Cardiff man in jihadist video begs him to return
The Atlantic, 23.06.2014Race and the Execution Chamber
The national death-row population is roughly 42 percent black—nearly three times the proportion in the general population.
Matt Ford
EurekAlert!, 23.06.2014Intervention appears to help teen drivers get more, better practice
Bottom Line: A web-based program for teen drivers appears to improve driving performance and quality supervised practice time before teens are licensed.
Telegraph.co.uk, 23.06.2014Murdered By My Boyfriend: How a confident, bubbly woman became a tragic victim of domestic violence
The writer of a new BBC drama, Murdered By My Boyfriend, based on real life events, explains how the typical perceived victims of domestic violence often couldn't be further from reality
Regina Moriarty
The British Psychological Society, 23.06.2014TV violence and brain functioning studied
A new study has linked exposure to violence on television with less mature brain development and poorer executive functioning in young men.
Rolling Stone, 23.06.2014Heil Hipster: The Young Neo-Nazis Trying to Put a Stylish Face on Hate
Inside the tote-bag friendly, "Harlem Shake"-happy world of Germany's "nipsters"
Thomas Rogers
Toronto Star, 23.06.2014The case of the big talker convicted of terrorism
Mohamed Hersi of Toronto is the first Canadian convicted under new anti-terror provisions. A jury believed was preparing to fight with Al Shabab
Michelle Shephard
Bangor Daily News, 24.06.2014Why it makes no sense to put more people in jail
Steven E. Barkan is professor of sociology at the University of Maine and former president of the Society for the Study of Social Problems.
By Steven E. Barkan
Guardian Professional, 24.06.2014How can social work education help practitioners address terrorism?
The curriculum must address more than child and adult safeguarding
Jonathan Parker and Sara Ashencaen Crabtree
theguardian.com, 25.06.2014Predicting crime, LAPD-style
Cutting edge data-driven analysis directs Los Angeles patrol officers to likely future crime scenes – but critics worry that decision-making by machine will bring 'tyranny of the algorithm'
Nate Berg
WalesOnline, 25.06.2014Web crime dominates policing, says officer
Police complain at least half their workload is now taken up by angry exchanges on social media
Darren Devine
theguardian.com, 26.06.2014What running Homicide Watch has taught me about crime in America
Laura Amico co-founded the groundbreaking website which enables families, friends and neighbours of both victims and suspects to track cases and see justice being done … or not
theguardian.com, 26.06.2014Inquiry into undercover police may lead to quashing of protesters' convictions
Investigation set up by Theresa May will examine if campaigners were wrongly convicted because police officers lied in court
Rob Evans
The Independent, 27.06.2014Exclusive: Government aims to win hearts and tackle extremism with documentary on families of dead jihadists
The Guardian, 27.06.2014The radicalisation of Samantha Lewthwaite, the Aylesbury schoolgirl who became the 'white widow'
Daily Beast, 27.06.2014Whitey Bulger: A Government-Approved Maniac
We’re fascinated by homicidal miscreants like Whitey Bulger because, says the director of a documentary about him, “the dark side makes everybody almost envious of somebody who breaks all the rules and gets away with it for a long time.”
National Post, 27.06.2014Sex in cruisers, lying under oath, assault, drunk driving, porn — a historic year of Mountie misconduct
Washington Post, 27.06.2014Shootings rise after China gives its police guns
BEIJING — A string of shooting incidents involving Chinese police — leaving at least four people dead — has the public wondering if rank-and-file officers are really ready to carry guns, as mandated by new regulations.
The Nation, 27.06.2014How Did the FBI Miss Over 1 Million Rapes?
Systematic undercounting of sexual assaults in the US disguises a hidden rape crisis.
Soraya Chemaly
theguardian.com, 27.06.2014On the city streets with the Detroit 300 community police force's armed A-team
Members of controversial voluntary organisation patrol neighbourhoods, hunt criminals and make citizen’s arrests - Billy Briggs in Detroit
Police News, 27.06.2014NYPD weighs whether cut in stop-and-frisks affects crime stats
Faced with an increase in shootings in recent months, the NYPD is studying whether the big drop in stop-and-frisk encounters has impacted crime
Anthony M. Destefano
The Seattle Times, 28.06.2014Guest: How to prevent more school shootings
Ending the shooting violence at schools means exerting gun control and providing mental-health care, writes guest columnist David R. Stone.
David R. Stone
The Economist, 28.06.2014Under the spotlight
Medina in Birmingham, Najaf in Brent: Inside British Islam. By Innes Bowen.Hurst; 288 pages; £16.99. To be published in America in September; $30.
University of Manchester, 30.06.2014Effects of mass violence under spotlight
An internationally renowned group of experts are to examine how the appalling effects of mass violence play out in the months and years after they have been perpetrated.
EurekAlert!, 30.06.2014Blood lead levels associated with increased behavioral problems in kids in China
Bottom Line: Elevated blood lead levels appear to be associated with teacher-reported behavioral problems in a study of preschool children in China.
The Atlantic, 30.06.2014Doctors' Role in Stopping Gun Violence
With proper training and guidelines, physicians could determine who is fit to carry a gun.
Iulia Filip
NEWS.com, 30.06.2014Are uprisings in Iraq, Syria and Ukraine plus tension in North Korea pushing world to the brink of war?
The Guardian, 30.06.2014Why it's critical that we boost the aspirations of black children
One in 5 black children believe their skin colour impedes their success prospects – how do we change this perception?
Hugh Muir