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- Volume 8, 2025
Annual Review of Criminology - Volume 8, 2025
Volume 8, 2025
- Safety, Crime and Policy
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Extreme Risk Protection Orders in the United States: A Systematic Review of the Research
Vol. 8 (2025), pp. 485–504More LessExtreme risk protection orders (ERPOs) are designed to protect against firearm violence and are a relatively new policy tool in the United States. As of April 2024, 21 states and the District of Columbia have enacted ERPO laws. This article presents a systematic review of the literature concerning ERPO laws, their use, and their effectiveness. Four main domains are considered in relation to the literature landscape: (a) formulation and passage of ERPO laws, (b) legal analyses of ERPO laws, (c) ERPO implementation, and (d) evaluations of ERPO laws. Thirty-six articles met our inclusion criteria and were analyzed. This systematic review provides the existing evidence regarding ERPO implementation and effectiveness and carves a pathway forward for future research, policy, and practice.
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Local Government Spending: Policing Versus Social Services
Vol. 8 (2025), pp. 505–528More LessUS cities have recently increased the share of their budgets devoted to policing and decreased the share devoted to social services. However, a growing body of research demonstrates that social services can durably reduce crime, raising the question of whether spending more on police and less on social services reduces crime in the short term only to increase it in the long term. This review addresses this question by first recounting recent trends in municipal budgeting. Then, it summarizes the causal evidence for which local government functions best reduce crime, focusing on policing, education, employment, and housing. Research suggests that education spending efficiently and durably reduces crime with fewer negative externalities than policing but with longer delays. Evidence that housing and employment spending suppresses crime is promising but nascent. Finally, the review recommends turning renewed scholarly attention to government budgets and the root causes of crime trends.
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