Skip to main content
Center for Justice Innovation logo Center for Court Innovations

Main navigation

  • About
    • About
    • People
    • Message from the Director
    • Awards
    • Announcements
    • Contact
    • Careers
    • Partners
  • Areas of Focus
  • Programs
  • Publications & Digital Media
    • All
    • Videos
    • New Thinking Podcast
    • In Practice Podcast
  • Press
Donate

Publications & Digital Media

Format
  • Publication

    The Midtown Community Court Experiment

    by John Feinblatt and Michele Sviridoff

    Published in Scams and Street Life: the Sociology of New York's Times Square. Robert P. McNamara, ed. Praeger: New York, 1995

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Overcoming Obstacles to Community Courts: A Summary of Workshop Proceedings

    by Staff of the Center for Court Innovation

    Representatives of eight cities discuss how they have adapted the community court model to their neighborhoods' unique needs. Published by the Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Department of Justice (November 1998)

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Neighborhood Justice: Lessons Learned from Midtown Community Court

    by Greg Berman, John Feinblatt, and Michele Sviridoff

    An analysis of the lessons learned from the Midtown Community Court and the issues that are raised when justice is administered on a neighborhood level.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Red Hook Diary: Planning a Community Court

    by Greg Berman

    How a planner for a neighborhood-based court in Brooklyn negotiated some of the early challenges of the project, including community needs assessment, fund-raising and program design.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Street Outreach Services

    by David C. Anderson

    A description of Midtown Community Court's street outreach program, launched in concert with the New York Police Department.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Dispensing Justice Locally (PART II): The Impacts, Costs and Benefits of the Midtown Community Court

    by David Rottman, Michele Sviridoff, and Robert Weidner

    The executive summary of Part II of the original evaluation of the country's first community court--the Midtown Community Court. The second phase focused on impacts on recidivism rates for select sub-groups of defendants; examined impacts on jail costs after accounting for "secondary jail sentences"; explored other cost and benefit implications; and surveyed the opinions of community residents.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Dispensing Justice Locally (PART I): The Implementation and Effects of the Midtown Community Court

    by Ric Curtis, Brian Ostrom, David Rottman, and Michele Sviridoff

    The executive summary of Part I of the original evaluation of the country's first community court--the Midtown Community Court. Includes a comprehensive description of the court and an analysis on the degree to which the court met each of its goals. The executive summary of Part II is available here.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice
  • Publication

    Dispensing Justice Locally: The Implementation and Effects of the Midtown Community Court

    by Michele Sviridoff, David Rottman, Brian Ostrom, and Ric Curtis

    This is the book form of Dispensing Justice Locally (PART 1): The Implementation and Effects of the Midtown Community Court. Published by Harwood Academic Publishers, Amsterdam, 2000.

    Problem-Solving Justice, Community Justice

Pagination

  • First page ← First
  • Previous page ←
  • …
  • Page 119
  • Page 120
  • Page 121
  • Page 122
  • Current page 123
Center for Justice Innovation logo Center for Justice Innovation

Footer menu

  • Contact
  • Expert Assistance
  • Research
  • Accessibility Statement

This website is funded in whole or in part through a grant from the Bureau of Justice Assistance, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Neither the U.S. Department of Justice nor any of its components operate, control, are responsible for, or necessarily endorse, this website (including, without limitation, its content, technical infrastructure, and policies, and any services or tools provided).

© 2023 Center for Justice Innovation

Subscribe to Our Email Newsletter

Social Navigation

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Instagram
  • RSS