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E-book
Author Aharoni, Eyal, author

Title An assessment of program sustainability in three Bureau of Justice Assistance Criminal Justice domains / Eyal Aharoni, Lila Rabinovic, Joshua Mallet, Andrew R. Morral
Published Santa Monica, California : RAND, 2014
©2014

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Description 1 online resource (xiii, 48 pages)
Summary The Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) aims to improve community safety through effective programming throughout the United States. To maximize the impact of its investments, BJA has an interest in supporting programs that will be sustained beyond initial federal funding. This notion of program sustainability is becoming increasingly important as programs have been challenged to operate with increasingly scarce resources. RAND Corporation researchers aimed to better understand the characteristics and environments of programs that are likely to persist beyond federal seed funding and to delineate strategies that will enable BJA to assist programs that it funds in their efforts to sustain themselves. Using archival documentation and survey methods, they assessed 231 BJA grantee programs spanning three BJA funding domains - drug courts, human trafficking, and mental health - to identify characteristics associated with sustainability. They found evidence of program sustainment in most BJA grantees studied, particularly in sustained funding. They also examined the association between organizational and contextual factors and sustained operations and sustained funding. Finally, they recommend a plan for ongoing measurement of sustainability
Notes "RAND Safety and Justice Program."
"The research described in this report was sponsored by the Bureau of Justice Assistance and was conducted in the Safety and Justice Program within RAND Justice, Infrastructure, and Environment."--Title page verso
"In this report, we describe a study of program sustainability examining the sustainment status of 231 BJA grantee programs from BJA's drug court (DC), human trafficking (HT), and mental health (MH) areas. To ground this task in a theoretical context, we started with a literature review outlining definitions of sustainment and the factors associated with sustained programs. These themes were further explored in primary data collection from interviews with seven key informants in the criminal justice field. Specifically, we asked about program characteristics and other factors associated with program sustainment beyond cessation of BJA funding. We then reviewed archival records on each program, including information contained within their grant applications, progress reports, BJA assessments, and other documents to select relevant characteristics and examined their association within program sustainment beyond seed funding. To assess program sustainment, we report results of a survey of 136 of the 231 funded grantees followed by an analysis of factors predictive of program sustainment."--Introduction
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (pages 45-48)
Notes Online resource; title from PDF title page (RAND, viewed June 30, 2014)
Subject United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance.
SUBJECT United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance fast
Subject Federal aid to law enforcement agencies -- United States -- Evaluation
Block grants -- United States -- Evaluation
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING -- Military Science.
Block grants -- Evaluation
Federal aid to law enforcement agencies -- Evaluation
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Rabinovich, Lila, author
Mallett, Joshua, author
Morral, Andrew R., author
Rand Safety and Justice (Program), issuing body.
United States. Bureau of Justice Assistance, sponsoring body.
ISBN 9780833086518
0833086510