NIJ Level IIIA NIJ is focused on advancing technology for criminal justice application including law enforcement and corrections, forensics, and judicial processes, as well as
criminology,
criminal justice, and related social science research. Much of this research is facilitated by providing grants to academic institutions, non-profit research organizations, and other entities, as well as collaborating with state and local governments. Areas of social science research include
violence against women,
corrections, and
crime prevention, as well as program
evaluation. Grants for technology development help facilitate research and development of technology and tools for criminal justice application, which is a need that the private sector is otherwise reluctant to meet. NIJ also supports development of voluntary equipment performance standards, as well as conducting compliance testing. Areas of technology research and development include
biometrics, communications
interoperability, information technology, less-lethal technologies (e.g.
tasers), and officer safety including
bullet-proof vests.
Crime mapping and analysis is a topic that includes both technology and social science (
geography) aspects. The National Law Enforcement and Corrections Technology Centers, which are located throughout the United States, play a role in law enforcement technology development, testing, and dissemination.
DNA initiative A major area of research and support is for
forensics and the president's
DNA initiative. The
Federal Bureau of Investigation developed the
Combined DNA Index System (CODIS) system as a central database of DNA profiles taken from offenders. In the late 1980s and 1990s, all of the states and the
federal government required DNA samples to be collected from offenders in certain types of cases. The demand (casework) for
DNA analysis in public
crime laboratories increased 73% from 1997 to 2000, and by 2003, there was a backlog of 350,000
rape and
homicide cases. In 2003, President
George W. Bush proposed the
Advancing Justice Through DNA Technology initiative, which would include $1 billion over five years to reduce backlogs, develop and improve capacity of state and local law enforcement to use DNA analysis, support research and development to improve the technology, and additional training for those working in the
criminal justice system.
Technical working groups Technical working groups (or TWGs) were created by the National Institute of Justice to create
crime scene guides for state and local
law enforcement. The guides were individually developed by a separate Technical Working Group tasked with a single topic. The groups were a
multidisciplinary group of content-area experts from across the
United States. The groups included urban and rural jurisdictions as well as Federal agencies representatives. Each participating member was experienced in the area of crime scene investigation and evidence collection in the
criminal justice system from the standpoints of law enforcement,
prosecution,
defense, or
forensic science. The Technical Working Groups were designed to be short term in duration to respond to a topic. Longer term groups exist under other organizations such as the FBI's
Scientific Working Group (SWG's) on Digital Evidence. Technology Working Group topics have included: During the several years of their existence they developed numerous guides including the following: •
Body armor testing for
bulletproofing and
stabproofing • Crime Scene Investigation: A Reference for Law Enforcement (pdf, 60 pages) Published June 2004 • Death Investigation: A Guide for the Scene Investigator (pdf, 72 pages) Published November 1999 • Fire and Arson Scene Evidence: A Guide for Public Safety Personnel (pdf, 73 pages) Published June 2000 • Guide for Explosion and Bombing Scene Investigation (pdf, 64 pages) Published July 2000 • Electronic Crime Scene Investigation: A Guide for First Responders (pdf, 93 pages) First Edition published July 2001; second edition published 2008 ==See also==