No. A listing on CrimeSolutions does not constitute an endorsement of particular programs or practices. Furthermore, it is not intended to replace or supersede informed judgment or innovation. CrimeSolutions recognizes that rigorous evaluation evidence is one of several factors to consider in justice programming, policy, and funding decisions. OJP also recognizes the importance of encouraging and supporting innovative approaches that may not yet have extensive evidence of effectiveness.
CrimeSolutions classifies programs and practices in three levels: “Effective,” “Promising” and “No Effects” based on the strength of the evaluation research that indicates a program or practice achieves its goals (i.e., its justice-related outcomes).
Evidence Rating | One-Study Icon | Multiple-Study Icon | Description |
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Effective |
Programs or Practices have strong evidence indicating they achieve justice-related outcomes. |
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Promising |
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Programs or Practices have some evidence indicating they achieve justice-related outcomes. |
No Effects |
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Programs or practices have strong evidence that the program did not have the intended effects or had harmful effects when trying to achieve justice-related outcomes. While programs and practices rated No Effects may have had some positive effects, the overall rating is based on the preponderance of evidence. |
A single-study icon is used to identify programs that have been evaluated with a single sample. A program with multiple publications listed in the evidence base may receive a single-study icon because:
- The publications resulted from a study based on a single sample.
- the studies that comprised the program’s evidence base did not demonstrate effects in a consistent direction.
A multiple studies icon is used to represent a greater extent of evidence supporting the evidence rating. The icon depicts programs that have more than one study in the evidence base demonstrating effects in a consistent direction.
Read more about evidence ratings at About CrimeSolutions.
A Program is a specified set of activities combined according to precise guidance in order to achieve a specific purpose. Program profiles on CrimeSolutions tell us whether a specific program was found to achieve its goals when it was carefully evaluated. The results apply to the exact set of activities and procedures used for that one program as it was implemented at the time of evaluation. Thus the program profile tells us that a program is likely to produce the observed result if implemented in exactly the same way.
A Practice is a general category of programs, strategies, or procedures that share similar characteristics with regard to the matters they address and how they do it. Practice profiles tell us about the average results from multiple evaluations of similar programs, strategies, or procedures. The programs, strategies, or procedures within a practice are similar because they share certain defining characteristics that are described for each practice profile on CrimeSolutions. Thus, practice profiles tell us the most typical results across multiple evaluations.
Sometimes a practice on CrimeSolutions will receive multiple evidence ratings because there is sufficient evidence available to draw conclusions about multiple outcomes addressed by that practice. This is because the ratings for practices are based on a larger amount of evidence using techniques of meta-analysis to examine the findings of numerous studies. With more evidence, it is possible to draw conclusions at a more detailed level of analysis. Programs on CrimeSolutions receive a single overall evidence rating because they are often based on only one evaluation study (although up to three may be included). With a smaller evidence base to inform conclusions, CrimeSolutions does not provide outcome-level ratings for programs.
CrimeSolutions includes “No Effects” programs and practices to inform policy makers and practitioners about the current status of available evaluation evidence before planning or implementing similar efforts.
No Effects programs and practices strong evidence that the program did not have the intended effects or had harmful effects when trying to achieve justice-related outcomes. In cases where negative effects were found, CrimeSolutions profiles for programs and practices will identify and describe observed negative effects.
While programs and practices rated No Effects may have had some positive effects, the overall rating is based on the preponderance of evidence.
Read more about Program Review and Rating from Start to Finish Tips for using CrimeSolutions.
You may notice that a practice's outcome ratings may not be the same as the programs that are encompassed by that practice and vice versa. For example, some practices have outcomes that are rated Effective but programs listed in the Related Programs section are rated Promising or No Effects.
This can happen because practice ratings reflect an assessment of the average effectiveness of a specific characteristic(s) common across programs, strategies, or procedures. Practice ratings do not take into account variations in implementation or other program-specific factors. If such variations impact the effectiveness of the essential practice characteristic(s), practice and program ratings may diverge as the program-specific effectiveness may differ from the average effectiveness across multiple programs.
A program with multiple publications listed in the evidence base may receive a single-study icon because:
- The publications resulted from a study based on a single sample.
- the studies that comprised the program’s evidence base did not demonstrate effects in a consistent direction.
Yes. Programs and practices from other countries are included in CrimeSolutions. These must have English language citations and are otherwise subject to the same criteria used for programs and practices located within the United States.
We appreciate your interest in becoming involved with CrimeSolutions; but at this time, we are not looking for additional reviewers at this time.
For practices, Study Reviewers analyze all of the eligible and applicable meta-analysis studies to determine whether there is evidence that the practice achieves its goal(s). The Study Reviewers use a standard Scoring Instrument to determine the quality of each meta-analysis and to determine the internal validity of each outcome within the meta-analyses. The quality rating for each meta-analysis is combined with the internal validity rating of each outcome and the statistical significance of the effect size to determine a final evidence rating. If there are multiple meta-analyses that assess a single outcome, the individual outcome ratings from each meta-analysis are then aggregated to determine the final rating for that outcome.
For practices, individual evidence ratings are assessed for each outcome. Therefore, a single practice may have multiple evidence ratings if it addresses multiple outcomes. That is, one practice may be rated “Effective” for achieving one outcome, and “Promising” for achieving another outcome.