The Program
in Criminal Justice Policy and Management at the Kennedy School of Government
aims to enable governments to fulfill their obligations to ensure public
safety and justice. We do this through research,
teaching and curriculum development,
and maintaining long-lasting partnerships with
practitioners and other scholars. We also organize executive
sessions--intensive conversations among leading practitioners and
scholars in a specific field that span several years, punctuated by
research, practical experimentation, and collaborative publications.
The Program
in Criminal Justice takes a sector-wide
view of criminal justice, focusing on the policies and management
of multiple institutions whose work contributes to safety and justice,
rather than specializing on issues of policing, courts, or corrections.
By examining multiple institutions at once, the program takes a broad
view of several issues that affect the entire justice and safety sector,
such as transparency, legitimacy, protection of human rights, and
cost-effectiveness.
The Program
also takes an international, comparative approach
to questions of safety and justice. This includes research to expand
the range of empirical indicators available to facilitate comparisons
among countries, particularly comparisons that cut across legal traditions
and levels of economic development.