No. 687-1, January 2020
Index
- Evidence-Based Policing and Fatal Police Shootings: Promise, Problems, and Prospects
- Firearm Availability and Fatal Police Shootings
- Five Years after Ferguson: Reflecting on Police Reform and What’s Ahead
- Moving beyond “Best Practice”: Experiences in Police Reform and a Call for Evidence to Reduce Officer-Involved Shootings
- Network Position and Police Who Shoot
- Organizational Accidents and Deadly Police-Involved Violence: Some Thoughts on Extending Theory, Expanding Research, and Improving Police Practice
- Police Killings as a Problem of Governance
- Police-to-Hospital Transport for Violently Injured Individuals: A Way to Save Lives?
- Predicting Bad Policing: Theorizing Burdensome and Racially Disparate Policing through the Lenses of Social Psychology and Routine Activities
- Preventing Avoidable Deaths in Police Encounters with Citizens: Immediate Priorities
- Reconciling Police and Communities with Apologies, Acknowledgements, or Both: A Controlled Experiment
- Reducing Violent Incidents between Police Officers and People with Psychiatric or Substance Use Disorders
- Social Interaction Training to Reduce Police Use of Force
- The Role of Individual Officer Characteristics in Police Shootings