European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) Praça find attached a letter from the Scientific Director of the EMCDDA inviting your society to nominate candidates for the 2016 EMCDDA scientific award. > > In addition we also send you a background document containing detailed information on the nomination and review procedure
"A new report from the Triangle Center on Terrorism and Homeland Security suggests that violent extremism may be prevented through the strategic approach of community policing. In "The Challenge and Promise of Using Community Policing Strategies to Prevent Violent Extremism: A Call for Community Partnerships with Law Enforcement to Enhance Public Safety", the success of this partnership hinges on the crucial detail of law enforcement's ability to foster trust in the communities they serve. The authors realize that the reality of the concept is not a rosy picture. Based on nationwide empirical data from both communities and law enforcement agencies, there are several significant obstacles. At large, the challenges focus on law enforcement's ability to handle non-terrorism public safety issues in their jurisdictions, as well as the economic impact (and lack of incentive therein) on police departments of allocating resources to community outreach. However, a more intricate and sensitive set of challenges lie within Muslim American communities. Three main challenges are identified: 1.) Muslim Americans feel they are being tasked with the responsibility to curb violent extremism stemming from their religion, while other non-Muslim communities are not asked to curb other types of extremism. 2.) Some Muslim Americans perceive community outreach initiatives as a surveillance attempt. 3.) Although most Muslim Americans have a positive attitude towards law enforcement, community outreach initiatives are still perceived as an element of a federal counter-terrorism program. Yet, even though the picture isn't rosy, it is far from bleak. The report found that many law enforcement agencies have, in fact, had success with creating a trust-based partnership, even in Muslim American communities. This is the basis for what the report calls the "Promise" - the implementation of "promising practices" which "can be a platform for honoring and respecting the human rights of Muslim American citizens while at the same time advancing the community and national interest of preventing terrorism." The report doesn't stop at the ideological threshold of what should happen. This report provides solid recommendations for both law enforcement agencies and communities for creating and maintaining a relationship in which the "promising practices" can be implemented successfully. For example, not only should local policing agencies create separate units for outreach and engagement, and hire a workforce that reflects the diverse makeup of their community, but community members also need to be more involved in expressing public safety concerns as well as contributing input on practical, non-discriminatory behaviors for engagement. The report is thorough and detailed, and provides many more recommendations than the handful mentioned here."
The next Annual International Forum of Crime Prevention, in English language, will take place in the German City of Magdeburg, on the occasion of the 21st German Congress on Crime Prevention on the 6th and 7th of June 2016.
The GCCP has published AIF Conference Reports. The PDF-Versions of the up to now 7 Volumes can be downloaded free of charge
Are you interested in exchanging views about legal and policy issues regarding criminal law, penal procedure, juvenile justice, criminal court organization, constitutional and human rights questions of crime control etc.? Then you may like to join the ILES-net
The Tuebingen Criminology and Criminal Justice Literature Database has for many years been part of the German resp. Interregional Information Exchange and Publication Loan Service system, financially supported by the German Research Association. Due to a special fund of the GRA for the newly established FID-Kriminologie, the whole database-system has been overhauled. You will find there some 240,000 entries, concerning primordially publications in German and English, but also publications in French, Spanish, Italian and a few other languages. In case of interest, please check the New KrimDok under: https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/ At the upper-right corner of the homepage, you can click on the bar “Sprache” and change it to the English language version.
The U.S. Department of Justice’s Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) is seeking applications for the Justice and Mental Health Collaboration Program (JMHCP), which supports innovative cross-system collaboration for individuals with mental illnesses or co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders who come into contact with the justice system. BJA will prioritize applications from law enforcement agencies that demonstrate a collaborative project with mental health partners to plan, implement, or expand strategies that are tailored to the needs of people with mental disorders.
WestEd By Sarah Guckenburg, Nancy Hurley, Hannah Persson, Trevor Fronius, Anthony Petrosino This research report, developed by researchers at the WestEd Justice & Prevention Research Center, focuses on how practitioners are integrating restorative justice (RJ) practices into their schools as an alternative to traditional responses to student misbehavior. The report covers how and when RJ is used in schools, and the successes and challenges schools face. The study findings are based on data from both a survey of and interviews with practitioners who are implementing RJ in schools.