Your Saved Resources Close

  • Saved resources will appear here

Resources

To support and help strengthen the work of advocates and organizers, the Hub is committed to providing and uplifting up-to-date research, reports, data, model policies, toolkits and other resources. We do this by searching for, categorizing, and making available existing resources from partner organizations and others working on issues related to policing. When needed, the Hub also produces its own research in collaboration with partners. This resource database is categorized, easy to search, and regularly updated by our research team.

If you would like to suggest a resource to be included in our database, please submit it here.

Resources that appear on the Community Resource Hub website are not necessarily supported or endorsed by the Hub. The resources that appear represent various different policies, toolkits, and data that have been presented to challenge issues relevant to safety, policing, and accountability.

Submit Your Resources

Filter Resources

Filter by Topic

Filter by Type

Showing 284 Resources Report × Clear All

New Era of Public Safety: A Guide to Fair, Safe, and Effective Community Policing

The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights

This report was developed to give individuals, communities, activists, advocacy organizations, law makers, and police departments the knowledge to co-produce public safety. The best practices recommended here are adaptable to every department, in every community across the nation; the ultimate goal is fair, safe, and effective policing that respects and protects human life and ensures safety for all.

View Resource

Arrest, Release, Repeat: How police and jails are misused to respond to social problems

Prison Policy Initiative

A report analyzing a federal survey with findings on the amount of people arrested and jailed each year and the frequency at which those individuals are cycled back into jail. Analysis shows that repeated arrests are related to race and poverty, as well as high rates of mental illness and substance use disorders. PPI found that people who are jailed have much higher rates of social, economic, and health problems that cannot and should not be addressed through incarceration. This report also includes policy solutions that can break this cycle of incarceration by addressing people’s needs in their communities rather than through the criminal justice system.

View Resource

Policing Chicago Public Schools: Gateway to the School-to-Prison Pipeline

Project NIA

A series of reports from 2010 to 2014 documenting data and trends on school-based arrests of Chicago youth.

View Resource

The 911 Call Processing System: A Review of the Literature as it Relates to Policing

Vera Institute of Justice

There is a pressing need for data-informed strategies to identify 911 calls that present a true public safety emergency and require an immediate police response, while responding to other calls in ways that do not tax limited policing resources and promote better outcomes for the people involved and the communities where they reside. This report summarizes the current state of 911 research, discusses the problems and potential of current 911 data collection practices, and recommends steps that law enforcement and emergency communications professionals can take to conserve resources and help ensure that the right response reaches the right caller at the right time.

View Resource

Gatekeepers: The Role of Police in Ending Mass Incarceration

Vera Institute of Justice

Ending mass incarceration and repairing its extensive collateral consequences must begin by focusing on the front end of the system: police work. Recognizing the roughly 18,000 police agencies around the country as gatekeepers of the system, this report explores the factors driving mass enforcement, particularly of low-level offenses; what police agencies could do instead with the right community investment, national and local leadership, and officer training, incentives, and support; and policies that could shift the policing paradigm away from the reflexive use of enforcement, which unnecessarily criminalizes people and leads directly to the jailhouse door.

View Resource

No se dispara de la vaqueta: Análisis de la política de uso de fuerza de la Policía de Puerto Rico – Analysis of the Puerto Rico Police Use of Force Policy

Kilometro 0

This is an analysis of the Use of force policy of the Puerto Rico Police Bureau, using Campaign Zero’s proposed analysis methodology.

View Resource

Documentación preliminar de intervenciones y casos de uso de fuerza de la Policía de Puerto Rico durante manifestaciones jornada #RickyRenuncia – Preliminary documentation of Puerto Rico police interventions and use of force during the #RickyRenuncia protests

Kilometro 0

This is a preliminary documentation of police abuse and interventions during the #RickyRenuncia protests in Puerto Rico.

View Resource

Police Union Contracts

Stephen Rushin (University of Alabama School of Law)

A report that demonstrates that police departments’ internal disciplinary procedures, often established through the collective bargaining process, can serve as barriers to officer accountability.

View Resource

Police Unions

Catherine L. Fisk & L. Song Richardson (University of California, Irvine School of Law)

For all the public controversy over police unions, there is relatively little legal scholarship on them. Neither the legal nor the social science literature on policing and police reform has explored the opportunities and constraints that labor law offers in thinking about organizational change. The scholarly deficit has substantial public policy consequences, as groups ranging from Black Lives Matter to the U.S. Department of Justice are proposing legal changes that will require the cooperation of police labor organizations to implement. This Article fills that gap.

View Resource

Show more

Sign up for our weekly resource roundup