
FEATURE
Accounting for Violence: How to Increase Safety and Break Our Failed Reliance on Mass Incarceration
This report describes four principles to guide policies and practices that aim to reduce violence: They should be survivor-centered, based on accountability, safety-driven, and racially equitable.
Explore social sector research that seeks to reform the criminal justice system, including the administration of courts and correctional facilities. This can include work around alternatives to incarceration as well as services and advocacy for prisoners, former offenders, and those in the juvenile justice system.
RESEARCH RELATED FUNDING
This trend line represents foundation funding for research & publication in this specific issue area. Data are from grants awarded by the FC 1000, a national sample of 1,000 of the largest grantmakers by total giving
% OF TOTAL FUNDING (2013)
Graph represents all funding for this issue area; the highlighted arc represents the proportion awarded explicitly for research and publication.
TITLES RECENTLY PUBLISHED

Levers of Change in Parole Release and Revocation
May 15, 2019
Publisher(s): Robina Institute of Criminal Law and Criminal Justice

The Courthouse Trap: How ICE Operations Impacted New York’s Courts in 2018
Jan 29, 2019
Publisher(s): Immigrant Defense Project

Safety and Justice Challenge: Evaluation Report
Dec 4, 2018
Publisher(s): RTI International ; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Beyond the Walls: A Look at Girls in D.C.'s Juvenile Justice System
Mar 28, 2018
Publisher(s): Rights4Girls ; Georgetown Juvenile Justice Initiative

Presumed Innocent for a Price: The Impact of Cash Bail Across Eight New York Counties
Mar 13, 2018
Publisher(s): NYCLU

Models for Change Legacy Phase Evaluation Report
Mar 12, 2018
Publisher(s): Community Science ; John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
TITLES FROM THE ARCHIVES

Call to Action: How Programs in Three Cities Responded to the Prisoner Reentry Crisis
Mar 1, 2007
Publisher(s): Public/Private Ventures

Models for Change: Building Momentum for Juvenile Justice Reform
Dec 1, 2006
Publisher(s): Justice Policy Institute