Browsing by Author "U.S. Department of Justice"
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Item 2015 DOJ Grants Financial Guide(U.S. Department of Justice, 2015) U.S. Department of JusticeThe 2015 DOJ Grants Financial Guide (the “Guide”) serves as the primary reference manual to assist OJP, OVW, and COPS Office award recipients in fulfilling their fiduciary responsibility to safeguard grant funds and ensure funds are used for the purposes for which they were awarded. It compiles a variety of laws, rules and regulations that affect the financial and administrative management of your award. There may be instances where the requirements may differ among the three grant-making components; those differences are spelled out throughout this Guide. We have provided references to the underlying laws and regulations as much as possible. This Guide should be the starting point for all recipients and subrecipients in ensuring the effective day-to-day management of your awards. The provisions of this 2015 Guide apply to Department of Justice awards made after December 26, 2014.Item Explanations for the decline in child sexual abuse cases(U.S. Department of Justice, 2004) Finkelhor, D.,& Jones, L.; U.S. Department of JusticeItem Guidelines for children s advocacy centers in Indian country(Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, 2004) U.S. Department of JusticeItem Identifying and Preventing Gender Bias in Law Enforcement Response to Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence(U.S. Department of Justice, 2015) U.S. Department of JusticeThe Purpose of This Guidance is to: examine how gender bias can undermine LEAs’ response to sexual assault and domestic violence; and provide a set of basic principles that—if integrated into LEAs’ policies, trainings and practices—will help ensure that agencies’ efforts to keep victims safe and hold offenders accountable are not undermined, either intentionally or unintentionally, by gender bias.Item The National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction(U.S. Department of Justice, 2016) U.S. Department of JusticeThis National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction has described in detail the current efforts of the Department of Justice and its law enforcement partners to find, prosecute, and punish those who prey on the nation’s children. It has described, as well, efforts by those agencies and others to engage in public outreach and awareness to prevent children from being victimized in the first place, whether through enticement of the unwary on-line or through their exploitation on the streets of the nation’s cities. It addressed the unique circumstances that lead to child exploitation in Indian County and the responses that are necessary to protect tribal victims. It further detailed the efforts by the Department and other agencies to provide services to children that account for the complex, intersecting, and long-lasting harms that exploitation causes. And it has forecast a future of greater technological and global threats. In order to face those threats, the National Strategy has outlined a series of goals for law enforcement, prosecutors, and victim service providers, among others, for protecting the nation’s children. Most importantly, the National Strategy reaffirms our unwavering commitment to ensuring that all children in America are able to reach their potential and are protected from violence and abuse.Item Report of the Attorney General’s Task Force on Children Exposed to Violence(U. S. Department of Justice, 2012) U.S. Department of JusticeTo prepare this report, U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder commissioned a task force of diverse leaders dedicated to protecting children from exposure to violence and to healing those who were exposed.The report calls for action by the federal government, states, tribes, communities, and the private sector across the country. EPUB MOBIItem The National Strategy for Child Exploitation Prevention and Interdiction(2010) U.S. Department of Justice