You can read the Urban Institute’s evaluation of the project here
You can follow the partner organizations and police departments involved as they continue to move the work forward:
Pittsburgh police chief, officers meet with community in trust-building effort - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Case Study: Community Input On Unmanned Aerial Systems (Drones), Stockton Police Department - NI
Minneapolis Police Chief hopes new department position creates better community relations - Fox
Birmingham mayor names police chief after 5 month search - AL.com
Opinion: A Better Solution for Starbucks - The New York Times
Minneapolis PD Says Use Of Force Dropped By Half In Last Decade - CBS
Berkeley police stops show racial disparities — but what does that mean? - Berkeleyside
Implicit bias describes the automatic association people make between groups of people and stereotypes about those groups.
Procedural justice focuses on the way police and other legal authorities interact with the public, and how the characteristics of those interactions shape the public’s views of the police, their willingness to obey the law, and actual crime rates.
Reconciliation is a method of facilitating frank engagements between minority communities, police and other authorities that allow them to address historical tensions, grievances, and misconceptions, and reset relationships.
For more information about technical assistance through the National Initiative, please submit requests to the Office of Justice (OJP) Programs Diagnostic Center. The OJP Diagnostic Center is a technical assistance resource designed to help state, city, county and tribal policymakers and community leaders use data to make decisions about criminal justice programming. The Diagnostic Center invests in what works by bridging the gap between data and criminal justice policy at the state, local and tribal levels. Diagnostic Center engagements are intended to build community capacity to use data to make short-and long-term evidence-based decisions about criminal justice and public safety.