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Date: November 22, 2024 Fri

Time: 11:36 am

Results for ceasefire program

4 results found

Author: Delaney, Christopher L.

Title: The Effects of Focused Deterrence on Gang Homicide: An Evaluation of Rochester's Ceasefire Program

Summary: In the late 1990's, a problem oriented policing initiative in Boston, "Operation: Ceasefire", achieved significant reductions in youth homicide by focusing on gang behavior. The program was driven by a concept known as focused deterrence. The success of the Boston program encouraged other jurisdictions across the country to implement their own versions of the Ceasefire project. In recent years, violence in Rochester, NY came to be seen as consistent with the gang driven problem described in Boston and a version of Operation Ceasefire was implemented in October, 2003. This study examines the Ceasefire program as implemented in Rochester, NY from October 2003 to December 2004. Using an interrupted time-series research design, the study finds limited but statistically significant reductions in homicides of black males ages 15-30 during the Ceasefire intervention period. Despite this finding, increases in 2005 homicides of black males ages 15-30 have raised concerns about the effectiveness of the program. A postscript examines the 2005 increase and considers explanations for the increase associated with potential theoretical and operational shortcomings in the Ceasefire program.

Details: Rochester, NY: College of Liberal Arts/Public Policy Program, Rochester Institute of Technology, 2005. 157p.

Source: Master's Thesis; Internet Resource

Year: 2005

Country: United States

URL:

Shelf Number: 118682

Keywords:
Ceasefire Program
Focused Deterrence
Gang Violence
Gangs
Homicide
Problem-Oriented Policing

Author: Webster, Daniel W.

Title: Interim Evaluation of Baltimore's Safe Streets Program

Summary: The Safe Streets program was designed and implemented in selected high-crime neighborhoods of Baltimore in an attempt to replicate Chicago's CeaseFire Program. The overall aims of the research are to: 1) describe how the program was implemented using objective measures generated by program implementers; 2) estimate program effects on attitudes and norms around gun violence among youth; and 3) estimate program effects on severe violence, especially severe violence involving youth. A fourth aim, not examined in this report, is to draw important lessons from the experiences and insights of the individuals who are implementing the program about what strategies and tactics appear to be most effective in preventing gun violence in communities. This is an interim report based on the first 14 months of Safe Streets implementation.

Details: Baltimore, MD: Center for the Prevention of Youth Violence, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 2009. 23p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed March 11, 2012 at http://www.baltimorehealth.org/info/2009_01_13.SafeStreetsEval.pdf

Year: 2009

Country: United States

URL: http://www.baltimorehealth.org/info/2009_01_13.SafeStreetsEval.pdf

Shelf Number: 124459

Keywords:
Ceasefire Program
Gun Violence (Baltimore)
Guns
Youth Violence (Balitmore)

Author: Berman, Greg

Title: From Chicago to Brooklyn: A Case Study in Program Replication

Summary: The last 25 years have seen the emergence of a remarkable number of new criminal justice innovations in the United States. Drug courts, family justice centers, HOPE Probation, community policing programs… these and other initiatives have spread from coast to coast. Most of these projects began life as one-of-a-kind experiments before being broadly replicated. Replication sounds easy, but experience tells us that it is anything but. Just because a program works in one location doesn’t mean it will automatically be effective in another. Balancing the demands of model fidelity with the need to adapt to local conditions on the ground is one of the most pressing challenges of replication, but it is far from the only one. In an effort to highlight some of the issues that replication efforts inevitably face, this paper tells the story of Save Our Streets (S.O.S.) Crown Heights, an effort to bring CeaseFire, a violence reduction project that originated in Chicago, to Brooklyn. The goal is to provide a ground-level view of the replication process from the perspectives of those charged with implementing the model. Along the way, this essay attempts to tease out lessons that will be relevant not just to those interested in the CeaseFire model, but to anyone charged with replicating a model originally created somewhere else.

Details: New York: Center for Court Innovation, 2011. 12p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed January 29, 2013 at: http://www.courtinnovation.org/sites/default/files/documents/Chicago_Brooklyn.pdf

Year: 2011

Country: United States

URL: http://www.courtinnovation.org/sites/default/files/documents/Chicago_Brooklyn.pdf

Shelf Number: 127410

Keywords:
Ceasefire Program
Gangs
Gun Violence
Violent Crime

Author: Picard-Fritsche, Sarah

Title: Testing a Public Health Approach to Gun Violence. An Evaluation of Crown Heights Save Our Streets, a Replication of the Cure Violence Model

Summary: Save Our Streets (SOS) is a community-based project established to address the problem of gun violence in Crown Heights, a neighborhood in central Brooklyn, New York. SOS is a replication of Chicago Ceasefire, a public health model for gun violence prevention founded in Chicago in 1999. The primary components of the Chicago Ceasefire model are outreach and conflict mediation directed towards individuals at high risk for future gun violence, as well as broader community mobilization and public education efforts throughout the target community. In 2008, using a quasi-experimental comparison neighborhood design, researchers with Northwestern University found that the original Chicago Ceasefire project had a statistically significant impact on the incidence and density of gun violence in three of five intervention neighborhoods (Skogan et al. 2008). A subsequent evaluation of a replication effort in Baltimore found that it too reduced gun violence in three of four intervention neighborhoods (Webster et al. 2009). However, an evaluation of a Pittsburgh replication that opted to omit several of the original program elements did not detect positive results (Wilson et al., 2010). The SOS project sought to implement the original Chicago model with high fidelity--with the help of technical assistance from the Chicago-based founders. Accordingly, this process and impact evaluation provides an important opportunity to determine whether Chicago Ceasefire can be effectively exported to other communities (the City of New York, for example, currently has Ceasefire replications in the works in several neighborhoods including Harlem, Jamaica, East New York, and the South Bronx).

Details: New York: Center for Court Innovation, 2012? 49p.

Source: Internet Resource: Accessed January 29, 2013 at: http://www.courtinnovation.org/sites/default/files/documents/SOS_Evaluation.pdf.

Year: 2012

Country: United States

URL: http://www.courtinnovation.org/sites/default/files/documents/SOS_Evaluation.pdf.

Shelf Number: 127411

Keywords:
Ceasefire Program
Gangs (New York City)
Gun Violence
Violent Crime