by Piza, E., Caplan, J. and Kennedy, L. (2014) Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 30(2): 237-264 Research BriefOpen Access Post PrintPublished Article PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Article description to be added soon.
Author Archives: Eric Piza
Is the Punishment More Certain? An Analysis of CCTV Detections and Enforcement
by Piza, E., Caplan, J. and Kennedy, L. (2014) Justice Quarterly, 31(6): 1015-1043 Research BriefOpen Access Post PrintPublished Article *This study was funded by the National Institute of Justice (grant number 2010-IJ-CX-0026) Key Takeaways Overall, calls for service exhibited shorter dispatch processing times than CCTV detections CCTV detections experienced higher case closure rates than callsContinue reading “Is the Punishment More Certain? An Analysis of CCTV Detections and Enforcement”
A Plague on Both Your Houses? Risks, Repeats, and Reconsiderations of Urban Residential Burglary
by Moreto, W., Piza, E., and Caplan, J. (2014) Justice Quarterly, 31(6): 1102-1126 Research BriefOpen Access Post PrintPublished Article PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Article description to be added soon.
Saturation Foot Patrol in a High-Violence Area: A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation
Piza, E. and O’Hara, B. (2014) Justice Quarterly, 31(4): 693-718 Research BriefVersion of Record (Open Access) Key Takeaways Research Summary In the summer of 2008 the Newark, NJ Police Department (NPD) commenced Operation Impact, a saturation foot patrol intervention modeled after an NYPD strategy of the same name. On a nightly basis, 12 police officersContinue reading “Saturation Foot Patrol in a High-Violence Area: A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation”
Using Police Data to Measure Children’s Exposure to Neighborhood Violence: A New Method for Measuring Children’s Exposure to Violence and Evaluation Relations Between their Exposure and Mental Health.
by Boxer, P., Sloan-Power, E., Piza, E., and Schappell, A.* (2014) Violence and Victims, 29(1): 24-33 Published Article PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Article description to be added soon.
Policing by Place: A Multi-Level Analysis of the Effectiveness of Risk Terrain Modeling for Allocating Police Resources in New York City
2014-2017Co-Principal Investigator: National Institute of Justice, Testing GeospatialPredictive Policing Strategies [2013-IJ-CX-0053]($461,384) PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Project description to be added soon.
Joint Utility of Event Dependent and Contextual Crime Analysis Techniques for Violent Crime Forecasting.
by Caplan, J., Kennedy, L., and Piza, E. (2013) Crime & Delinquency, 59(2): 243-270 Published Article PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Article description to be added soon.
A Multi-Jurisdictional Test of Risk Terrain Modeling and a Place-Based Evaluation of Environmental Risk-Based Patrol Deployment Strategies
2013-2015Co-Principal Investigator: National Institute of Justice, Testing GeospatialPolice Strategies and Exploring their Relationship to CriminologicalTheories [2012-IJ-CX-0038]($499,633) PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION: Project description to be added soon.
Using Poisson and Negative Binomial Regression Models to Measure the Influence of Risk on Crime Incident Counts
Piza, E. (2012) Newark, NJ: Rutgers Center on Public Security Published Article (Open Access) PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION. Article description to be added soon.
A Primer on the Spatial Dynamics of Crime Emergence and Persistence
Kennedy, L., Caplan, J., and Piza, E. (2012) Rutgers Center on Public Security: Newark, NJ Published book PAGE UNDER CONSTRUCTION. Book description to be added soon.