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NCJRS Abstract


The document referenced below is part of the NCJRS Library collection.
To conduct further searches of the collection, visit the NCJRS Abstracts Database.

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NCJ Number: NCJ 212214   Add to Shopping cart   Find in a Library
Title: National Evaluation of the Title V Community Prevention Grants Program
Corporate Author: ICF International (formerly Caliber Associates)
United States
Date Published: 08/2006
Page Count: 241
Sponsoring Agency: Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
US Dept of Justice
United States
Grant Number: OJP-99-C-007
Sale Source: Juvenile Justice Clearinghouse/NCJRS
P.O. Box 6000
Rockville, MD 20849
United States
Document: HTML 
Type: Program/project evaluations
Language: English
Country: United States
Annotation: This report presents findings from a national evaluation of the Title V Community Prevention Grants Program (11 sites in 6 States), which provided funding and a guiding framework for developing and implementing comprehensive juvenile delinquency prevention plans.
Abstract: The evaluation found that some of the 11 communities funded under the Title V model struggled to understand and implement the model and some failed, while others understood how the model applied to their local circumstances and experienced the benefit of increased collaboration, reduced duplication in services, and more effective juvenile delinquency prevention programming. The evaluation provided the opportunity to identify the conditions under which communities could use the Title V model successfully and those under which they could not. To some extent, all of the communities implemented each of the four stages of the Title V model: a risk-focused and protection-focused approach, research-based planning, communitywide interventions, and local flexibility. The manner in which they implemented each stage, however, differed across communities. These differences could often be attributed to a community's previous exposure to comprehensive prevention planning. Some communities had difficulty in making programs simultaneously comprehensive, practical, and measurable for their effectiveness. Lessons learned from the evaluation are the necessity to broaden the definition of "success," the importance of starting small and building on successes, and the provision of ongoing training and technical assistance that helps communities understand and implement the program model under their distinctive conditions. In order to address research questions, the evaluation team developed a comprehensive, multimethod data collection plan for each community that examined program implementation over a 4-year period through quarterly reports and site visits at least twice a year. Reports are provided for the sites in each of the six States. 4 references
Main Term(s): Juvenile delinquency preventn prgs
Index Term(s): Grants or contracts ; Juvenile delinquency prevention ; Interagency cooperation ; Program implementation ; Effectiveness of crime preventn prgs ; OJJDP grant-related documents
Note: Downloaded July 2, 2007
 
To cite this abstract, use the following link:
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=233687

* A link to the full-text document is provided whenever possible. For documents not available online, a link to the publisher's web site is provided.


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