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1

Winters, John C. "“The Great White Mother”: Harriet Maxwell Converse, the Indian Colony of New York City, and the Media, 1885–1903." Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era 21, no. 4 (October 2022): 279–300. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1537781422000317.

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AbstractThis article reveals the history of the unstudied “Indian Colony” of Gilded Age New York City through the life of its founder and governor, Harriet Maxwell Converse. Converse was a white woman adopted by the Senecas and a salvage ethnographer, a potent combination of Indigenous “authenticity” and scholarly authority that made her an object of fascination to white New Yorkers who read about her in extensive newspaper coverage. The Colony itself was composed of boarding houses, Converse’s own townhouse-turned-museum, and was connected to the New York Police Department. It provided housing and support to resident and visiting Native Americans who found work in the city’s “Indian trade” and booming entertainment industry.By highlighting the extensive newspaper coverage of Converse and her Colony, this article reveals a hidden history of the Indigenous people who lived and worked in the city. It also pushes the periodization of the earliest urban Indian communities backward in time by more than a decade and shows how the media fused the daily life of Converse and the Colonists with popular stereotypes of “savage” and “vanished” Indians, immigrant stereotypes, assimilation, gendered expectations, and the predatory academic desires of museums and salvage ethnographers.
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Macdonald, Maritza, David Silvernail, Natasha Cooke-Nieves, Sharon Locke, Aline Fabris, Nakita Van Biene, and Michael J. Passow. "How museums, teacher educators, and schools, innovate and collaborate to learn and teach geosciences to everyone." Terrae Didatica 14, no. 3 (September 28, 2018): 271–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.20396/td.v14i3.8653525.

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Natural History museums are well known and even famous for the multiple educational opportunities they offer to the public, which includes international visitors, and students and schools. This paper introduces a new role for museums, as sites for the education and certification of new science teachers. In 2017, the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) completed evaluation of its initial six years as the first museum-based Master of Arts in Teaching (MAT) Earth science program in the USA. The program was conceptualized in response to multiple levels of local and national education policies, and the still cur-rent need to improve Earth science education for all students, especially those designated ‘at-risk.’ Race to the Top (RTTT) in New York State and the National Commission on Teaching for America’s Future had been call-ing for the reconceptualization of teacher education for several years. MAT began as a pilot program authorized by NYS, the result of a competition for inno-vation in the design of programs outside the traditional university structures that corre-sponded to areas of need (at the inter-section of the sciences and quality education for New English Learners and students with learning disabilities). In developing the museum-specific part of the program, theoretical perspectives from research on Strands of Learning Science in Informal In-stitutions, Spatial thinking, and Place-based Learning. Also the selection of candidates required background in one of the Earth Science fields. In addition, scientists and curators became part of the faculty and directed the field and laboratory residencies at the end of the school year and before beginning to teach in schools. After three years, the pilot was fully authorized to grant its own degrees. The institution operates on multiple levels: it is a teaching residency program that awards degrees, maintains strong partnerships with schools, is a member of the network of Independent Colleges and Universities in New York State, and provides on-site graduate courses for other col-leges and universities on the educational role of, and research on, informal learning in science institutions. The museum is at the heart of the program’s design. Courses include research on learning in museums, pedagogical content knowledge re-garding science, and experiential residencies geared toward preparing candidates to teach in both museums and public schools, as well as conduct independent and team science research. Courses are co-taught by scientists and educators, and are designed to use museum exhibitions and resources, including current and past scientific research, technology, and online teaching tools in order to facilitate instruction, demonstrate the nature of science, and com-plement science with cultural histories that highlight the role of science in society. Evaluation evidence indicates the program has been successful in pre-paring teachers to teach in high-needs urban schools in New York State. An external-impact quanti-tative study by NYU, focused on student performance on the standardized New York State Earth Science Regents Examination, indicated that (1) students of MAT graduates are doing as well as students taught by other Earth science teachers with similar years of experience in New York City; and (2) demographically, MAT teachers instruct a higher percentage of students with lower economic and academic profiles. This paper focuses on how the program design utilizes all aspects of a natural history museum to offer the science museum community, teacher educators, and policy-makers new approaches for the preparation of teachers and the education of their students.
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Parsons, H. deB. "NEW POLICE BOAT FOR NEW YORK CITY." Journal of the American Society for Naval Engineers 6, no. 2 (March 18, 2009): 345–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1559-3584.1894.tb05836.x.

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4

Ho, Truc-Nhu. "Art Theft in New York City." Empirical Studies of the Arts 16, no. 1 (January 1998): 41–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.2190/frbj-ula8-wny5-nxa8.

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This exploratory study was conducted to examine the extent of art theft in New York City. The study includes secondary analyses of 229 police complaint reports and twelve completed investigative cases of the NYPD's Art and Antique Investigation Unit collected during the period from January 1985 to December 1988, and personal interviews with a randomly selected sample of forty-five art dealers in New York City. Results from the analysis of police data and the survey were compared, leading to the conclusion that contrary to popular belief, the majority of art theft losses are not substantial and that official records greatly underestimate the extent of this crime.
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Grennan, Sean A. "New York City Shooting Incidents by Police Officers." Psychological Reports 63, no. 3 (December 1988): 992. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1988.63.3.992.

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6

Antonovich, Jacqueline. "Review: Germ City: Microbes and the Metropolis, Museum of the City of New York, New York City, NY." Public Historian 41, no. 3 (August 1, 2019): 153–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/tph.2019.41.3.153.

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7

Pagane, J., A. Chanmugam, T. Kirsch, and G. D. Kelen. "New York City Police Officers Incidence of Transcutaneous Exposures." Occupational Medicine 46, no. 4 (August 1, 1996): 285–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/occmed/46.4.285.

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8

Levine, E. S., Jessica Tisch, Anthony Tasso, and Michael Joy. "The New York City Police Department’s Domain Awareness System." INFORMS Journal on Applied Analytics 47, no. 1 (February 2017): 70–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/inte.2016.0860.

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9

Marzuk, Peter M., Matthew K. Nock, Andrew C. Leon, Laura Portera, and Kenneth Tardiff. "Suicide Among New York City Police Officers, 1977–1996." American Journal of Psychiatry 159, no. 12 (December 2002): 2069–71. http://dx.doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.159.12.2069.

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10

GOODFRIEND, JOYCE D. "Slavery in colonial New York City." Urban History 35, no. 3 (December 2008): 485–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0963926808005749.

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Manhattan's landscape contains few material reminders of its colonial past. Traces of the Native Americans who frequented the island, the Dutch who planted New Amsterdam at its tip and the various European and African peoples who populated the city renamed New York by the English in 1664 are few and far between. Though the obliteration of the tangible remains of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century city dwellers speeded the transformation of Manhattan into a vibrant twentieth-century metropolis, the dearth of visible signs of this era has complicated historians' efforts to fabricate enduring images of the men and women of this early urban society. Their stories, though dutifully rehearsed by schoolbook writers and museum curators, have rarely become etched in memory.
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Vitale, Alex S. "Jammed Up: Bad Cops, Police Misconduct, and the New York City Police Department." Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews 43, no. 5 (August 26, 2014): 701–2. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0094306114545742cc.

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12

Evans, Douglas N., and Cynthia-Lee Williams. "Stop, Question, and Frisk in New York City: A Study of Public Opinions." Criminal Justice Policy Review 28, no. 7 (October 8, 2015): 687–709. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0887403415610166.

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New York City’s Stop-and-Frisk program has been a contentious police practice for more than 40 years. There is extensive research that examines attitudes toward the police; however, empirical research has yet to analyze citizens’ perceptions of stop-and-frisk. This study uses data from pedestrians to uncover their opinions of stop-and-frisk. Results demonstrate that several demographic characteristics predicted attitudes toward stop-and-frisk; minorities and younger citizens had less positive views, and unfavorable opinions were linked to living in New York City; having less education; being unemployed; having lower income; not married; no children; having been previously frisked by police; and vicarious experiences of others with stop-and-frisk. The results provide insights into demographic and experiential factors that influence attitudes toward stop-and-frisk. As perceived unfairness often undermines police authority, identifying factors that predict unfavorable attitudes toward police practices can aide in allocating resources to further efforts to improve police–community relations.
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Chu, Doris, John Huey-Long Song, and John Dombrink. "Chinese Immigrants’ Perceptions of the Police in New York City." International Criminal Justice Review 15, no. 2 (November 2005): 101–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1057567705283894.

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14

Larson, Richard C., and Thomas F. Rich. "Travel-Time Analysis of New York City Police Patrol Cars." Interfaces 17, no. 2 (April 1987): 15–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/inte.17.2.15.

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15

Eterno, John A., and Eli B. Silverman. "The New York City Police Department's Compstat: Dream or Nightmare?" International Journal of Police Science & Management 8, no. 3 (September 2006): 218–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1350/ijps.2006.8.3.218.

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16

Jackson, Debra. "Jacob A. Riis: Revealing New York’s Other Half at The Museum of the City of New York, and: Activist New York at The Museum of the City of New York." New York History 96, no. 3-4 (2016): 413–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/nyh.2016.0057.

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17

Chronopoulos, Themis. "Police Misconduct, Community Opposition, and Urban Governance in New York City, 1945–1965." Journal of Urban History 44, no. 4 (April 2, 2015): 643–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144215574695.

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In the post–World War II period, the police department emerged as one of the most problematic municipal agencies in New York City. Patrolmen and their superiors did not pay much attention to crime; instead they looked the other way, received payoffs from organized crime, performed haphazardly, and tolerated conditions that were unacceptable in a modern city with global ambitions. At the same time, patrolmen demanded deference and respect from African American civilians and routinely demeaned and brutalized individuals who appeared to be challenging their authority. The antagonism between African Americans and the New York Police Department (NYPD) intensified as local and national black freedom organizations paid more attention to police behavior and made police reform one of their main goals.
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Milivojevic, Sanja. "Mandatory Arrest Law in domestic violence cases and its implementation in New York City." Temida 5, no. 3 (2002): 27–40. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/tem0203027m.

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This paper contains the analysis of the Mandatory Arrest Law in domestic violence cases in New York State. Introduction includes the subject and main goals of the paper. Second chapter starts with historical development of the police response in domestic violence cases in New York before and after the Mandatory Arrest Law is passed, than analysis of the Law, and ends with one of the programs which Safe Horizon, Victim Service organization, developed in New York City. Third chapter gives the analysis of pro et contra arguments for mandatory arrest provision and results of surveys and studies, which were conducted in United States. In fourth chapter we present the analysis of the research conducted in two police precincts in New York City this year. Paper also contains the list of main problems in implementation of this Law in New York City.
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Ransom, Pamela, and Sidique Wai. "Fostering community engagement." Police Journal: Theory, Practice and Principles 90, no. 3 (December 4, 2016): 261–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0032258x16679857.

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This case study explores a dynamic process of strategic change involving the New York City Police Department Community Precinct Councils, the advisory structures designed to facilitate engagement between communities and police precincts in neighbourhoods across New York City. The initiative included an active process of agency and precinct council involvement in leadership and police staff dialogues and feedback surveys to explore management and operational issues, new needs and suggestions to increase the vitality and functioning of these important civic bodies. Challenges of engaging in the change process are assessed, with communication and partnerships emerging as central themes.
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Figures, Kalisha Dessources, and Joscha Legewie. "Visualizing Police Exposure by Race, Gender, and Age in New York City." Socius: Sociological Research for a Dynamic World 5 (January 2019): 237802311982891. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2378023119828913.

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This figure depicts the disparities in average police stops in New York City from 2004 to 2012, disaggregated by race, gender, and age. Composed of six bar charts, each graph in the figure provides data for a particular population at the intersection of race and gender, focusing on black, white, and Hispanic men and women. Each graph also has a comparative backdrop of the data on police stops for black males. All graphs take a similar parabolic shape, showing that across each race-gender group, pedestrian stops increase in adolescence and peek in young adulthood, then taper off across the adult life course. However, the heights of these parabolic representations are vastly different. There are clear disparities in police exposure based on race and gender, with black men and women being more likely than their peers to be policed and with black men being policed significantly more than their female counterparts.
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Chalfin, Aaron, Brandon del Pozo, and David Mitre-Becerril. "Overdose Prevention Centers, Crime, and Disorder in New York City." JAMA Network Open 6, no. 11 (November 13, 2023): e2342228. http://dx.doi.org/10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.42228.

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ImportanceThe first government-sanctioned overdose prevention centers (OPCs) in the US opened in New York City (NYC) in November 2021 amid concerns that they may increase crime and disorder, representing a significant political challenge to OPCs.ObjectiveTo identify whether opening the first 2 government-sanctioned OPCs in the US was associated with changes in crime and disorder.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsIn this cohort study, difference-in-differences Poisson regression models were used to compare crime, residents’ requests for assistance for emergencies and nuisance complaints, and police enforcement in the vicinity of NYC’s 2 OPCs with those around 17 other syringe service programs that did not offer overdose prevention services from January 1, 2019, through December 31, 2022.Main Outcomes and MeasuresChanges in the volume of crimes reported by the public or observed by police; arrests for drug possession and weapons; 911 calls and 311 calls regarding crime, public nuisances, and medical events; and summonses issued by police for criminal infractions in both the immediate vicinity of the sites (ie, a hexagonal area spanning about 6 city blocks) and their wider neighborhoods (ie, a tesselated 3-hexagon array spanning about 18 city blocks).ResultsNo significant changes were detected in violent crimes or property crimes recorded by police, 911 calls for crime or medical incidents, or 311 calls regarding drug use or unsanitary conditions observed in the vicinity of the OPCs. There was a significant decline in low-level drug enforcement, as reflected by a reduction in arrests for drug possession near the OPCs of 82.7% (95% CI, −89.9% to −70.4%) and a reduction in their broader neighborhoods of 74.5% (95% CI, −87.0% to −50.0%). Significant declines in criminal court summonses issued in the immediate vicinity by 87.9% (95% CI, −91.9% to −81.9%) and in the neighborhoods around the OPCs by 59.7% (95% CI, −73.8% to −38.0%) were observed. Reductions in enforcement were consistent with the city government’s support for the 2 OPCs, which may have resulted in a desire not to deter clients from using the sites by fear of arrest for drug possession.Conclusions and RelevanceIn this difference-in-differences cohort study, the first 2 government-sanctioned OPCs in the US were not associated with significant changes in measures of crime or disorder. These observations suggest the expansion of OPCs can be managed without negative crime or disorder outcomes.
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Kargin, Vedat. "Police Use Of Excessive Force: A Case Study Of Lethal (Deadly) Force." European Scientific Journal, ESJ 12, no. 1 (January 29, 2016): 488. http://dx.doi.org/10.19044/esj.2016.v12n1p488.

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Two African-American civilians, Sean Bell and Amadou Bailo Diallo, suffered tragic deaths as a result of use of lethal force by the police. This case study presents an in-depth analysis of the determinants that affected the officers’ use of lethal force with regard to the above mentioned cases. In 1999, Amadou Bailo Diallo was killed in a 41-bullet police shooting in New York. Similarly in 2006, Sean Bell was shot to death in a 50-bullet fusillade that involved officers from The New York City Police Department. After the Bell shooting, officers of The New York City Police Department were under investigation. The case study focuses on and examines the similarities and differences of both cases, official and public reactions in the aftermath of the shootings, investigation processes, as well as the indictments of the police officers involved in both cases. Finally, this study proposes some suggestions on the use of excessive force based on the findings of the two specific cases.
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Goldstein, Paul J., Henry H. Brownstein, and Patrick J. Ryan. "Drug-Related Homicide in New York: 1984 and 1988." Crime & Delinquency 38, no. 4 (October 1992): 459–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011128792038004004.

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This article reports findings from two studies, Drug Related Crime Analysis 1 (DRCA-H1) and Drug Related Crime Analysis 2 (DRCA-H2). Both addressed the need for routine and systematic collection of data about the drug-relatedness of homicide. DRCA-H1, conducted in New York State in 1984, focused on assessing the usefulness of existing police records for researching this subject. DRCA-H2 involved data collection during ongoing police investigations in New York City between March 1 and October 31, 1988. Both studies were structured and their findings analyzed in terms of a tripartite conceptualization of the drugs/homicide nexus. Comparing the findings of the studies reveals that existing police records are generally inadequate for providing insight into the complexities of the drugs/crime/violence nexus. However, findings from DRCA-H2 show that it is possible for researchers to work effectively with police to collect critically needed information, without causing significant disruption.
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Pate, Antony M., and Penny Shtull. "Community Policing Grows in Brooklyn: An Inside View of the New York City Police Department's Model Precinct." Crime & Delinquency 40, no. 3 (July 1994): 384–410. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011128794040003006.

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In 1990 the New York City Police Department committed itself to implementing community-oriented policing throughout the city. They selected the 72nd precinct in Brooklyn to test a comprehensive police model with full staffing and resources. The Police Foundation, with funding from the National Institute of Justice, conducted a process evaluation of the program, which among other things, examined its effects on the structure and operations of police activities. Results showed that officers had favorable impressions of community policing and that they were able to identify residents' concerns and develop effective methods for solving neighborhood problems.
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Wide, Thomas. "New York at its Core: A Review of an Exhibition at the City Museum of New York." New Global Studies 12, no. 1 (April 25, 2018): 103–6. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/ngs-2018-0009.

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Janicka, Elżbieta. "„To nie była Ameryka”. Z Michaelem Charlesem Steinlaufem rozmawia Elżbieta Janicka (Warszawa – Nowy Jork – Warszawa, 2014–2015)." Studia Litteraria et Historica, no. 3–4 (January 31, 2016): 364–480. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/slh.2015.021.

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“This was not America.” Michael Charles Steinlauf in conversation with Elżbieta Janicka (Warsaw – New York – Warsaw, 2014–2015)Born in Paris in 1947, Michael Charles Steinlauf talks about his childhood in New York City, in the south of Brooklyn (Brighton Beach), in a milieu of Polish Jewish Holocaust survivors. His later experiences were largely associated with American counterculture, the New Left, an anti-war and antiracist student movement of the 1960s (Students for a Democratic Society, SDS) as well as the anticapitalist underground of the 1970s (“Sunfighter”, “No Separate Peace”). In the 1980s, having undertaken Judaic Studies at Brandeis University, Steinlauf arrived in Poland, where he became part of the democratic opposition circles centred around the Jewish Flying University (Żydowski Uniwersytet Latający, ŻUL). In the independent Third Republic of Poland, he contributed to the creation of the Museum of the History of Polish Jews in Warsaw.Michael C. Steinlauf’s research interests focus on the work of Mark Arnshteyn (Andrzej Marek) and of Yitskhok Leybush Peretz, Yiddish theatre as well as Polish narratives of the Holocaust. The latter were the subject of his monograph Bondage to the dead: Poland and the memory of the Holocaust (1997, Polish edition 2001 as Pamięć nieprzyswojona. Polska pamięć Zagłady). An important topic of the conversation is the dispute concerning the categories used to describe the Holocaust, including the conceptualisation of Polish majority experience of the Holocaust as a collective trauma. Controversies also arise in connection with the contemporary phenomena popularly conceptualised as the “revival of Jewish culture in Poland” and “Polish–Jewish dialogue.” Another subject of the conversation is Michał Sztajnlauf (1940–1942), Michael C. Steinlauf’s stepbrother. The fate of the brothers was introduced into the canon of Polish culture by Hanna Krall’s short story Dybuk (1995, English edition 2005 as The Dybbuk) and its eponymous stage adaptation by Krzysztof Warlikowski (2003). Looking beyond artistic convention, the interlocutors try to learn more about Michał himself. This is the first time the readers have an opportunity to see his photographs from the Warsaw Ghetto.The conversation is illustrated with numerous archival materials from periods before and after World War Two as well as from German-occupied Poland. „To nie była Ameryka”. Z Michaelem Charlesem Steinlaufem rozmawia Elżbieta Janicka (Warszawa – Nowy Jork – Warszawa, 2014–2015)Urodzony w 1947 roku w Paryżu, Michael Charles Steinlauf opowiada o dzieciństwie spędzonym w Nowym Jorku, na południowym Brooklynie (Brighton Beach), w środowisku ocalałych z Zagłady polskich Żydów. Istotna część jego późniejszych doświadczeń związana była z amerykańską kontrkulturą, Nową Lewicą, studenckim ruchem antywojennym i antyrasistowskim lat sześćdziesiątych (Students for a Democratic Society, SDS) oraz podziemiem antykapitalistycznym lat siedemdziesiątych („Sunfighter”, „No Separate Peace”). W latach osiemdziesiątych, w związku z podjęciem studiów judaistycznych na Brandeis University, Steinlauf przyjechał do Polski, gdzie stał się częścią środowiska opozycji demokratycznej, skupionego wokół Żydowskiego Uniwersytetu Latającego (ŻUL). W III RP miał swój udział w tworzeniu Muzeum Historii Żydów Polskich w Warszawie.Zainteresowania badawcze Michaela C. Steinlaufa ogniskują się wokół twórczości Marka Arnsztejna (Andrzeja Marka), Jicchoka Lejbusza Pereca, teatru jidysz oraz polskich narracji o Zagładzie, którym poświęcił monografię Pamięć nieprzyswojona. Polska pamięć Zagłady (2001, pierwodruk angielski 1997 jako Bondage to the dead: Poland and the memory of the Holocaust). Ważną część rozmowy stanowi spór dotyczący kategorii opisu Zagłady, w tym koncepcji polskiego doświadczenia Zagłady jako traumy zbiorowej. Kontrowersja nie omija zjawisk współczesnych, konceptualizowanych potocznie jako „odrodzenie kultury żydowskiej w Polsce” oraz „dialog polsko-żydowski”.Bohaterem rozmowy jest także Michał Sztajnlauf (1940–1942), przyrodni brat Michaela C. Steinlaufa. Historia braci weszła do kanonu kultury polskiej za sprawą opowiadania Hanny Krall Dybuk (1995) oraz teatralnej inscenizacji Krzysztofa Warlikowskiego pod tym samym tytułem (2003). Abstrahując od konwencji przekazu artystycznego, rozmówcy próbują dowiedzieć się czegoś więcej o samym Michale. Czytelniczki i czytelnicy po raz pierwszy mają możność zobaczyć jego fotografie pochodzące z getta warszawskiego.Rozmowa jest bogato ilustrowana niepublikowanymi dotąd archiwaliami sprzed drugiej wojny światowej i z okresu powojennego, a także z czasów okupacji hitlerowskiej w Polsce.
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Holtzman, Benjamin. "Expanding the Thin Blue Line: Resident Patrols and Private Security in Late Twentieth-Century New York." Modern American History 3, no. 1 (February 28, 2020): 47–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/mah.2020.1.

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In the late 1960s and 1970s, New York City experienced escalating crime alongside residents’ growing frustration with the inability of municipal officials and the police to curtail it. These forces led a range of New Yorkers, from those in low-income neighborhoods to those in business districts, to sidestep the police and reimagine their responses to crime. Increasingly, everyday residents formed neighborhood patrols and hired guards, while businesses and institutions employed private security forces. These developments forged a new role for private actors in the patrolling of city streets. Over time, as resident patrols waned and as security guards proliferated, the private sector gained significant new capacities to surveil and police public space. Additionally, by formalizing a cooperative relationship with private security forces, the New York police and municipal authorities captured these private resources for the expansion of the carceral state.
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Lester, David. "A Study of Police Suicide in New York City, 1934–1939." Psychological Reports 73, no. 3_suppl (December 1993): 1395–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.2466/pr0.1993.73.3f.1395.

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A study of 92 suicides among police officers in New York City from 1934 to 1939 gave little evidence that work-related stress played a role. Those suicides who were alcohol abusers were younger, less often promoted, more often had current job stress, and more often had interpersonal motives for their suicide.
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Sugarman, Barry. "Organizational Learning and Reform at the New York City Police Department." Journal of Applied Behavioral Science 46, no. 2 (May 4, 2010): 157–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0021886310369088.

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Dubber, M. D. "Street Justice: A History of Police Violence in New York City." Journal of American History 93, no. 2 (September 1, 2006): 560–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4486324.

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Khondaker, Mahfuzul. "Book Review: Jammed Up: Bad Cops, Police Misconduct, and the New York City Police Department." Criminal Justice Review 38, no. 3 (September 2013): 398–400. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0734016813492413.

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Harris, LaShawn D. "“My mother was my everything”: Police Murder, Family Loss and Deferred Dreams." Langston Hughes Review 28, no. 2 (September 1, 2022): 124–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.5325/langhughrevi.28.2.0124.

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ABSTRACT On December 9, 1984, a New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer fatally shot New York mother of three Sharon Walker. Police violence not only killed Walker: The bullet lodged in her body harmed all those who loved her, particularly her three teenage children. Broadening conversations on police violence, this article examines the diverse ways in which police violence and parental loss impact the lives of a less familiar community of police brutality survivors: children and teenagers. It employs the 1984 police murder of Sharon Walker and her children’s lives as a window into what anthropologist Christen Smith referred to as the “lingering, deathly aftereffects of police terror on the bodies of the living in the aftermath of police killings” (Smith, “Lingering Trauma” 370).
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Greene, Judith A. "Zero Tolerance: A Case Study of Police Policies and Practices in New York City." Crime & Delinquency 45, no. 2 (April 1999): 171–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0011128799045002001.

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The police reforms introduced in New York City by William Bratton are now hailed by Mayor Rudy Giuliani as the epitome of “zero-tolerance” policing, and he credits them for winning dramatic reductions in the city's crime rate. But the number of citizen complaints filed before the Civilian Complaint Review Board has jumped skyward, as has the number of lawsuits alleging police misconduct and abuse offorce. Comparison of crime rates, arrest statistics, and citizen complaints in New York with those in San Diego—where a more problem-oriented community policing strategy has been implemented—gives strong evidence that effective crime control can be achieved while producing fewer negative impacts on urban neighborhoods.
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Levine, E. S., and J. S. Tisch. "Analytics in Action at the New York City Police Department's Counterterrorism Bureau." Military Operations Research 19, no. 4 (December 1, 2014): 5–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.5711/1082598319405.

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Khondaker, Mahfuzul I., Yuning Wu, and Eric G. Lambert. "The views of Bangladeshi immigrants on the police in New York City." Journal of Crime and Justice 39, no. 4 (June 19, 2015): 528–49. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0735648x.2015.1052536.

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36

Moran, Marcel E. "Authorized Vehicles Only: Police, parking, and pedestrian access in New York City." Transportation Research Interdisciplinary Perspectives 19 (May 2023): 100816. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.trip.2023.100816.

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37

Mercado, Monica L. "The Politics of Women's History: Collecting for the Centennial of Women's Suffrage in New York State." Collections: A Journal for Museum and Archives Professionals 14, no. 3 (September 2018): 331–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/155019061801400309.

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The 2017 New York State suffrage centennial provided momentum for institutions to review and reimagine their women's history collections. Five of the many museum exhibitions timed to this anniversary— Votes for Women: Celebrating New York's Suffrage Centennial at the New York State Museum, Woman's Protest: Two Sides of the Fight for Suffrage in New York at the Cayuga Museum, Beyond Suffrage: A Century of New York Women in Politics at the Museum of the City of New York, and Hotbed and Collecting the Women's Marches at the New-York Historical Society—offer an opportunity to examine curatorial strategies that build on and share existing women's history collections, often accompanied by pointed acknowledgments of the unfinished struggles for voting rights and women's rights. As a constellation of historic sites and museums, state and federal commemorative commissions, and public and private funders join forces to bring these materials and the ideas they carry out of storage and into the exhibition gallery, this study of New York-based institutions speaks directly to commemorations being planned for the 2020 centennial of the Nineteenth Amendment and to new collecting projects in U.S. history museums more broadly.
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Hilden, Patricia Penn. "Race for Sale: Narratives of Possession in Two “Ethnic” Museums." TDR/The Drama Review 44, no. 3 (September 2000): 11–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/10542040051058591.

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Have the Museum for African Art and the National Museum of the American Indian, both in New York City, been able to “move the center” from Euro-America to Africa, the African diaspora, or Native America?
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Feminist, Asian. "We Want Cop-Free Communities: Against the Creation of an Asian Hate Crime Task Force by the NYPD." Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies 45, no. 1 (2024): 114–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/fro.2024.a922897.

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Abstract: This is a statement published by the Asian American Feminist Collective in August 2020 against the creation of an Asian hate crime task force in the New York City Police Department. Signed by other local New York City and national organizations, this statement highlights ways that the task force will not make communities safer, but instead put communities (especially the most vulnerable) at greater risk.
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Hillyer, Reiko. "The Guardian Angels: Law and Order and Citizen Policing in New York City." Journal of Urban History 43, no. 6 (July 5, 2017): 886–914. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144217714761.

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This article explores the rise of the Guardian Angels, a community patrol organization founded in 1979 in New York City by Curtis Sliwa and composed mainly of black and Latino youths. The group emerged in an era of economic restructuring coupled with a rising fear of crime. The Guardian Angels merit attention because of their peculiar relationship to the rise of law and order politics. They demonstrate that the fear of crime was neither the monopoly of the white middle class nor merely a construction of politicians. Black and Latino Guardian Angels were agents of community crime control who drew on existing customs of self-determination and distrust of the police. Ultimately, however, the activities and the rhetoric of the Guardian Angels contributed to the rise of a conservative discourse that justified the strengthening of the police state, anxiety about crime, and the gentrification of neighborhoods.
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Zamoff, Mitchell E., Brad N. Greenwood, and Gordon Burtch. "Who Watches the Watchmen: Evidence of the Effect of Body-Worn Cameras on New York City Policing." Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization 38, no. 1 (October 25, 2021): 161–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jleo/ewab026.

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Abstract We present a multi-year study of the rollout of Body-Worn Cameras (BWCs) to the New York City Police Department (NYPD). Our study adds to the prior body of work by clarifying some of the discord within it, particularly with respect to large urban police departments. We estimate the effect of BWC deployment on precinct volumes of citizen stops, arrests, complaints against officers, and use-of-force incidents. Results indicate that BWCs drive significant increases in stops and decreases in arrests and citizen complaints. We observe no effect on use of force. We also document heterogeneity in affected stops and complaints. Our findings speak to three potential benefits of BWCs in urban law enforcement: an increase in legitimate stops made by police; a decrease in complaints alleging officers’ abuse of authority; and a reduction in arrests (which appears beneficial, regardless of whether this results from improved behavior among police or citizens).
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Stokes-Rees, Emily, Blaire M. Moskowitz, Moira Sun, and Jordan Wilson. "Exhibition Review Essay and Reviews." Museum Worlds 7, no. 1 (July 1, 2019): 238–61. http://dx.doi.org/10.3167/armw.2019.070115.

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Exhibition Review Essay:Exhibition without Boundaries. teamLab Borderless and the Digital Evolution of Gallery Space by Emily Stokes-Rees Exhibition Reviews:The Colmar Treasure: A Medieval Jewish Legacy. The Met Cloisters, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York by Blaire M. MoskowitzShanghai Museum of Glass, Shanghai; Suzhou Museum, Suzhou; and PMQ, Hong Kong by Moira SunThe Story Box: Franz Boas, George Hunt and the Making of Anthropology. Exhibition at the Bard Graduate Center Gallery in New York City (14 February–7 July 2019) and the U’mista Cultural Centre in Alert Bay, British Columbia (20 July–24 October 2019) by Jordan Wilson
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Esposito, Michelle Marie, and Anna King. "New York City: COVID-19 quarantine and crime." Journal of Criminal Psychology 11, no. 3 (May 18, 2021): 203–21. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jcp-10-2020-0046.

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Purpose In early 2020, the world faced a rapid life-changing pandemic in the form of the Coronavirus Disease of 2019 (COVID-19) crisis. Citywide lockdowns with stay-at-home orders and mass closings quickly became the “new normal.” With these new mandates, routine activity, mental health and financial securities all began to experience major deviations, and it became clear that this could prove to be rather valuable in providing the opportunity for large-scale criminology experiments. This study aims to explore New York City's (NYC) crime patterns during this unique social situation. Specifically, has crime as a whole increased or decreased, and have particular crimes increased or decreased during these stressful fluid times? Design/methodology/approach The authors briefly review previous crises and worldwide trends but focus on NYC crime as collected by the New York Police Department's statistics unit, “CompStat.” An analysis of 13 crime types from March 30 to July 5 was completed, including percent differences and individual weekly incidence rates in citywide crimes compared to the same time in 2019. Findings The analysis demonstrated that all crimes analyzed, except for murder and burglary, exhibited a statistically significant difference during COVID-19 conditions compared to the same time the previous year. Grand larceny auto and gun violence crimes significantly increased during COVID-19 weeks, whereas rape, other sex crimes, robbery, felony assault, grand larceny, transit, housing, misdemeanor assault and petit larceny all significantly decreased. Originality/value Due to the ongoing nature of the pandemic, this is amongst the first studies to examine trends in NYC crime during pandemic mandates. Expanding our knowledge in these situations can inform natural disaster responses, as well as criminal justice policy and practice to better protect the public in future crises.
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Harris, LaShawn Denise. "“Women and Girls in Jeopardy by His False Testimony”: Charles Dancy, Urban Policing, and Black Women in New York City during the 1920s." Journal of Urban History 44, no. 3 (October 6, 2016): 457–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0096144216672447.

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Troubling partnerships between the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and criminal informants during the mid-1920s adversely impacted urban African American women’s daily lives. Part of multiple hierarchies of municipal corruption, undercover surveillance operations represented one of many apparatuses law enforcers employed to criminalize black women’s ordinary behavior, to reinforce Progressive era images of black female criminality and promiscuity, and to deny women of their personhood and civil rights. Black New Yorker and criminal informant Charles Dancy, identified by local black newspapers as a vicious con artist and serial rapist, figured prominently in undercover police operations. Dancy falsely identified black women as sex workers and had them arrested, and in the process sexually assaulted women. New York blacks were outraged by some NYPD members’ use of informants as well as black women’s erroneous legal confinement. Situating informant work within the context of police brutality, racial inequity, and the denial of American citizenship, New York African American race leaders, newspaper editors, and ordinary folks devised and took part in resistance strategies that contested police surveillance operations and spoke on behalf of those who were subjected to state sanctioned violence.
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45

Guajardo, Salomon A. "New York City Police Department Downsizing and Its Impact on Female Officer Employment." Journal of Ethnicity in Criminal Justice 13, no. 4 (December 31, 2014): 255–82. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15377938.2014.936640.

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46

Lee, Joongyeup. "Police use of nonlethal force in New York City: situational and community factors." Policing and Society 26, no. 8 (December 15, 2014): 875–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2014.989162.

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47

Sewell, Abigail A., and Kevin A. Jefferson. "Collateral Damage: The Health Effects of Invasive Police Encounters in New York City." Journal of Urban Health 93, S1 (January 15, 2016): 42–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11524-015-0016-7.

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48

Ferreira, Leonardo Gonçalves. "A EXPOSIÇÃO “GRAFITTI: NEW YORK MEETS THE DAM” DO MUSEU DE AMSTERDÃ ENQUANTO UMA ZONA DE CONTATO." Revista Pós Ciências Sociais 17, no. 33 (January 24, 2020): 275. http://dx.doi.org/10.18764/2236-9473.v17n33p275-296.

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O presente artigo objetiva analisar a exposição Graffti: New York meets the Dam, do Museu de Amsterdã, enquanto uma zona de contato (CLIFFORD, 2016). Esta exposição foi realizada entre 2015 e 2016, em parceria com o Museu da cidade de Nova York, uma vez que no início da década de 1980, ocorreu um encontro, em Amsterdã, entre grafteiros estadunidenses e holandeses, o que modifcou profundamente o grafte produzido na cidade. O propósito, assim sendo, é analisar, a partir da exposição, se as representações das assimetrias e dos confrontos do encontro entre grafteiros de Amsterdã e de Nova York estão presentes na construção narrativa da exposição e conferem a mesma o caráter de uma zona de contato.Palavras-chave: Museus. Exposição. Zona de contato. Grafite.“GRAFITTI: NEW YORK MEETS THE DAM” EXHIBITION AT AMSTERDAM MUSEUM AS A CONTACT ZONESummaryThis article aims to analyze the Graffiti exhibition: New York meets the Dam, of the Amsterdam Museum, as a contact zone (CLIFFORD, 2016). This exhibition was held between 2015 and 2016 in partnership withthe New York City Museum, since the early 1980s there was a meeting between American and Dutch graffiti artists in Amsterdam, which profoundly changed the graffiti produced in the city. The purpose, therefore,is to analyze, taking the exhibition as a starting point, if the representations of the asymmetries and the confrontations of themeeting between graffiti artists of Amsterdam and New York are present in the narrative construction of the exhibition and confer to it the character of a contact zone.Keywords: Museums. Exhibition. Contact zone. Graffiti.
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Zhang, Zhe, and Ashley Barr. "Gentrification and crime in Buffalo, New York." PLOS ONE 19, no. 6 (June 20, 2024): e0302832. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0302832.

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Since the 1990s, gentrification has significantly changed American urban landscapes. Its implications for crime are under recent scrutiny, particularly in large cities like New York City, Los Angeles, and Chicago. We extend this literature by focusing on the gentrification-crime link in the midsize city of Buffalo, New York using nine years of data from the American Community Survey and the Buffalo Police Department. Examining changes both within tracts over time and changes between gentrified and never-gentrified tracts, we find that gentrification is associated with reduced property crime and is not associated with changes in violent crime. More specifically, in comparing crime trends across tracts, we find that gentrified tracts show a trajectory of declining property crime that mirrors more advantaged tracts, while vulnerable-but-never-gentrified tracts show a U-shaped trajectory of property crime. Looking at within-tract changes, we find that years following gentrification of a given tract have lower property crime rates than years preceding gentrification, independent of the general reduction in crime over time. We discuss the implications of these findings for understanding the intersections between urban processes and crime.
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Gibson, David. "Digital Asset Symposium: Museum of Modern Art, New York City, April 25, 2008." Moving Image 8, no. 2 (2008): 86–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/mov.0.0023.

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