JC in the News
You can access the latest roundup of JC members in the news, appearing in outlets such as The Washington Post, The New Yorker, The Atlantic, NBC News, and The New York Times.
Scholar
- Baskin-Sommers 3
- Bell 10
- Betts 15
- Bozic 1
- Camacho 11
- Canales 1
- Doherty 3
- Forman Jr 21
- Goff 38
- Gohara 7
- Gripp 1
- Hinton 24
- Jackson 1
- Justice 1
- Justice Collaboratory 1
- Katsaros 3
- Kohler-Hausmann 6
- Meares 39
- Orihuela 1
- Papachristos 10
- Peyton 1
- Richeson 8
- Sarnoff 4
- Sierra-Arévalo 3
- Stanley 6
- Thomas 1
- Tyler 15
- Venkatesh 5
- Wang 7
- Weaver 8
- Yaffe 2
The Fear Factor: Better Understanding Online Discussions About Crime and Safety
Tech Policy Press | The JC writes a blog for Tech Policy about trying to better understand how people discuss crime on Nextdoor.
Caroline Nobo on LoveBabz Lovetalk
New Haven Independent Radio | Justice Collaboratory Executive Director Caroline Nobo is interviewed by New Haven Independent radio host Babz Rawls-Ivy.
Opinion: ‘Know why I pulled you over?’ Fortunately, California police can’t ask you that anymore
LA Times | JC postbac Michael Bochkur-Dratver writes an op-ed for the LA Times about California Assembly Bill 2773 and how it could better improve relations between police and the public.
War of the words: The role of political rhetoric during wartime
The Wheelhouse | Jason Stanley talks to WNPR's The Wheelhouse examining the role of rhetoric in our politics — and how it can contribute to violence at home and abroad.
Inside Yale Law School: James Forman, Jr.
Inside Yale Law School | Professor James Forman Jr. discusses his criminal justice work and his Pulitzer-Prize-winning book Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America. He also describes the Law School Access Program, an innovative pipeline program for people from the New Haven area who are underrepresented in the law.
Tom R. Tyler Awarded Stockholm Prize in Criminology for Pioneering Research on Legitimacy and Procedural Justice
Swedish Ministry of Justice | JC co-founder Tom R. Tyler has been awarded the prestigious Stockholm Prize in Criminology for pioneering and advancing research on legitimacy and procedural justice to increase trust in policing. The prize is the world’s highest honor in the field of criminology. Since 2006, the prize has recognized outstanding achievements in criminological research or the application of research results by practitioners for the reduction of crime and the advancement of human rights.
Zach Bryan’s 'lippy' arrest has a hidden lesson about traffic stops
MSNBC | Justice Collaboratory Executive Director Caroline Nobo writes an oped about the recent arrest of country music star Zach Bryan.
Understanding the Trust-Law Dynamic: Insights on Legitimacy
Trust Talk Podcast | Tom Tyler gives an interview to the Trust Talk podcast and explains that historically, the legal system relied on a sanction-based model, threatening punishment to ensure compliance. However, behavioral science research has shown that building trust between the public and legal authorities is a more effective approach to gaining compliance and cooperation.
Study shows first words from police during traffic stops affect outcome for Black drivers
PBS Newshour | Tracey Meares speaks with PBS Newshour about the PNAS study revealing how crucial the first 30 seconds of a police encounter can be, particularly for black drivers.
No One Knows What ‘Race Neutral’ Admissions Looks Like
The Atlantic | Issa Kohler Haussman asks how should colleges and universities replace affirmative action if the Supreme Court does indeed strike it down?
They called 911 for help. Police arrived. They ended up shot or dead.
USA Today | Policing fatality data is not easy to access, and the data that is collected is not granular enough to capture how often police injure or kill someone who calls 911.
Procedural justice can address generative AI’s trust/legitimacy problem
Tech Crunch | It is time for Silicon Valley to embrace a different approach to earning our trust — one that has been proven effective in the nation’s legal system.
Connecticut Normalized Clemency. Not Anymore
The Marshall Project | After commuting nearly 100 sentences in less than two years, the state is facing a backlash.
The Black prison population increased during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, report finds
The Grio | While more white people were released from prison, more Black and brown people were going to prison in the year after the pandemic started.
Tucker Carlson is not an anti-war populist rebel. He is a fascist
The Guardian | Jason Stanley writes about former Fox News host Tucker Carlton for The Guardian
White people were kept out of prison during COVID. Blacks, Latinos were left behind bars.
USA Today | New research by JC members Elizabeth Hinton and Emily Wang, MD find that the historic reductions in U.S. prison populations during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic disproportionately benefited white people.
Opinion: Why the Trump indictment isn’t as legally dubious as many claimed
LA Times | Gideon Yaffe writes an op-ed for the LA Times on how a New York grand jury used tested legal theories in order to charge Trump with federal crimes.