RESOURCES
Knowledge Center
Outcomes, discoveries, and analysis from our breadth of good governance initiatives.
![[From Our Partners] Examining the Impacts of Arrest Deflection Strategies on Jail Reduction Efforts](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fcea962a1b4d771ad256fcc/63e08e7c-f022-4563-a38a-339c518dd0e4/Examining+the+Impacts+of+Arrest+Deflection+on+Jail+Reduction+Strategies_Synthesis+brief.png)
[From Our Partners] Examining the Impacts of Arrest Deflection Strategies on Jail Reduction Efforts
Using administrative data from local crisis centers and interviews with police officers in Pima County, AZ and Charleston County, SC, this mixed methods study aimed to understand how deflection of individuals with SMHD/SUD operates in both sites.
![[From Our Partners] Youth Opportunity Hubs: Mid-Evaluation Report](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fcea962a1b4d771ad256fcc/1642504172502-WU3303D0ZN0A6O45O0AZ/YOH_Mid-Evaluation_Report-2+cover.jpg)
[From Our Partners] Youth Opportunity Hubs: Mid-Evaluation Report
Youth Opportunity Hubs use a trauma-informed, positive youth development framework to provide comprehensive services to young people ages 13-24. By offering opportunities and emphasizing young people’s strengths, the Hubs aim to address both risk and protective factors—including in such areas as health, educational attainment, household income, and connections to school or work—and reduce the likelihood that youth will have interactions with the criminal legal system. This report highlights mid-evaluation findings related to the ongoing process evaluation conducted by Westat and Metis Associates of the Youth Opportunity Hubs initiative.

Reinvesting in Community: Criminal Justice Investment Initiative 2021 Annual Report
CJII’s comprehensive approach to public safety shows how investments in community-based initiatives increase opportunities, strengthen supports, heal prior trauma and injustice, and contribute to a stronger, safer city. The 2021 annual report shows that CJII-funded programs have directly supported more than 32,000 people in New York City. In addition, these programs have engaged at least 55,000 additional people in one-time workshops and trainings.
![[From Our Partners] Evaluations of the Misdemeanor Diversion Program in Durham County, North Carolina](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5fcea962a1b4d771ad256fcc/1638225590741-AAM28H590TR6Y7V2F8UF/Screenshot+%2832%29.png)
[From Our Partners] Evaluations of the Misdemeanor Diversion Program in Durham County, North Carolina
The Urban Institute, a Safety + Justice Challenge Research Consortium Member, conducted an in-depth process and impact evaluation of the Misdemeanor Diversion Program (MDP) in Durham County, North Carolina, which resulted in a series of reports on the program’s implementation and effectiveness. The first report was released in July 2021 and focused on The Urban Institute’s exploration of the MDP’s implementation, successes, challenges, and perceived impact. The second report, released in November 2021, focused on program outcomes, including enrollment, completion, recidivism, and system-level impacts. Overall, the findings show fewer new criminal justice contacts and reductions in racial disparities; findings also emphasized the need for local law enforcement buy-in, the need to scale the MDP, and the need to improve data collection as critical for MDP’s continued success. A policy brief synthesized results from both components of the evaluation and offered policy implications for these types of efforts, specifically in the context of young adults.

Jail Decarceration and Public Safety: Preliminary Findings from the Safety and Justice Challenge
The goal of the Safety and Justice Challenge is not only to reduce jail populations, but to do so safely—and this has been a pillar of the initiative since its inception in 2015. While previous briefs have highlighted the substantial reductions made in jail populations across SJC sites, this report provides an initial look at SJC’s decarceration strategies through a safety lens. More specifically, it explores how aggregate crime rates and returns to custody among people released from jail changed after the launch of SJC and the implementation of its decarceration strategies in sites through 2019. Overall, the findings suggest that decarceration strategies can indeed be crafted and implemented responsibly, without compromising public safety. In fact, public safety outcomes across SJC sites and in most individual sites remained relatively constant before and after the implementation of decarceration reforms.

Creating a Trauma-Informed Abusive Partner Intervention Program
This policy brief explores the new trauma-informed abusive partner intervention program being piloted in Manhattan, describes core program tenets of that model, and outlines early policy recommendations for working with abusive partners, serving survivors, and integrating trauma-informed care into behavioral health and social service delivery.