Jeffrey Butts interviewed on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal program by host Bill Scanlan.
Jeffrey Butts interviewed on C-SPAN’s Washington Journal program by host Bill Scanlan.
New York City’s MAP strategy marshaled the talents and energies of residents to improve public safety and build healthy communities working in collaboration with local government and nonprofit partners. The initiative implemented MAP in more than a dozen public housing developments spread across New York City. John Jay College’s Research and Evaluation Center worked with NORC at the University of Chicago to assess the design and implementation of MAP by observing operations, interviewing local officials and staff, and surveying residents.
The Research and Evaluation Center at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (JohnJayREC) partnered with Osborne Association to evaluate the first five years of a program designed to improve relationships between formerly incarcerated fathers and their children.
JohnJayREC reviewed the evidence for policies and programs that reduce violence without relying on police.
Causal relationships are difficult to identify in complex and multi-part initiatives, but New York City’s falling rate of gun violence suggests that recent community initiatives may have helped to sustain previous gains.
The notion that youth confinement fell in response to progressive reforms is merely appealing rhetoric.