The Eisenhower Foundation has released two updates of the National Violence Commission, as well as updates of the Kerner Riot Commission. Eisenhower Foundation President Alan Curtis edited the Foundation's 15 year update of the Violence Commission, published by Yale University Press in 1985. Curtis and Eisenhower Foundation Trustee Elliott Currie, Professor of Criminology, Law and Society at the University of California, Irvine, co-authored the Foundation's 30 year update in 1999. The 1985 National Violence Commission update was featured on the
CBS Evening News with Dan Rather and presented in a forum at the
Harvard Kennedy School, a forum at the
John F. Kennedy Library in
Boston, and a forum at the United States Senate at which Senator
Edward Kennedy was keynote speaker. The Senate forum was published in a special issue of the
Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science edited by Curtis and covered in a story in
Foundation News. The
Foundation News story concluded: The policy message that emerged from the [Senate forum] participants was clear. Using a public-private approach, efforts should be made to combine employment, community involvement and family to prevent crime; move away from a federal policy of increased incarceration; reverse the "trickle down" policy of federal anti-crime programs affecting neighborhoods to a "bubble-up" process emanating from the local level; and formulate a new cooperative role for police as supporters, not strictly enforcers. Titled
To Establish Justice, To Insure Domestic Tranquility, the 1999 update of the National Violence Commission was featured in a debate on the PBS
NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. Curtis observed to reporter
Ray Suarez: The original Violence Commission predicted that we would have a city of the future in which the middle class would escape to the suburbs, drive to work in sanitized quarters, and work in buildings protected by high tech. That city of the future has come true. An editorial in the
Detroit Free Press said that city was Detroit. Domestic tranquility is roughly the same [in 1999 as in 1969] in spite of the increase in prison building. On the other hand, we haven’t had an increase in justice. We have 25 percent of all our young children living in poverty. We have the greatest inequality in terms of wealth and income and wages in the world. One of every three African-Americans is in prison, on probation or on parole at any one time – and one out of every two in cities. That is a direct result of the racial bias in our sentencing system and our mandatory minimum sentences. For example, crack-cocaine sentences are longer, and crack cocaine is used more by minorities. Powder cocaine sentences are shorter, and powder cocaine is used more by whites. The result is that our prison populations are disproportionately filled with racial minorities. Yet, at the same time, prison building has become a kind of economic development policy for [white] communities which send lobbyists to Washington. In addition, the National Violence Commission updates were covered by news stories in the
Washington Post,
Los Angeles Times,
Newsweek and
USA Today, interviews on NPR, and editorials in the
Detroit Free Press,
Philadelphia Daily News and
Chicago Tribune, among other media. For example, the 1999
Detroit Free Press editorial focused on the Violence Commission's 1969 "city of the future" prediction of "suburban neighborhoods, increasingly far-removed from the central city, with homes fortified by an array of security devices; high-speed police-patrolled expressways becoming sterilized corridors connecting safe areas [and] urban streets that will be unsafe in differing degrees…That was in 1969. Sounds like any metropolitan area you know?" ==Firearms policy==