Journalist's Resource

Menu

Shorenstein Logo

  • Government
    Government
    • Budget
    • Congress
    • Criminal Justice
    • Health Care
    • Immigration
    • Infrastructure
    • Municipal
    • Security, Military
  • Economics
    • Banks
    • Business
    • Inequality
    • Jobs
    • Personal Finance
    • Real Estate
    • Taxes
    • Workers
  • Environment
    • Cities
    • Climate Change
    • Ecology
    • Energy
    • Food, Agriculture
    • Pollution
    • Sustainability
    • Transportation
  • Politics
    • Ads, Public Opinion
    • Campaign Media
    • Citizen Action
    • Digital Democracy
    • Elections
    • Finance, Lobbying
    • Polarization
    • Primaries
  • Society
    • Culture
    • Drug Policy
    • Education
    • Gender
    • Housing
    • Internet
    • News Media
    • Public Health
    • Race
    • Religion
    • Social Media
  • International
    • Africa
    • China
    • Conflicts
    • Development
    • Global Tech
    • Globalization
    • Human Rights
    • U.S. Foreign Policy
  • Tip sheets
  • Syllabi
  • About Us
  • Contact
THE CORONAVIRUS PANDEMIC
Subscribe
Criminal Justice

Research reveals link between high pollen counts and low crime rates

Clark Merrefield | September 27, 2019
New research reveals something unexpected about allergies: U.S. cities experiencing unusually high pollen counts also experience lower rates of reported violent crime.
Police car
Immigration

Victims less likely to report violent crime in newer immigrant communities

Denise-Marie Ordway | April 25, 2019
Victims are less likely to report violent crime to police if they live in counties where immigrant populations swelled after 1990, according to research forthcoming in Criminology.

A project of Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center and the Carnegie-Knight Initiative, Journalist’s Resource curates, summarizes and contextualizes high-quality research on newsy public policy topics. We are supported by generous grants from the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and The National Institute for Health Care Management (NIHCM) Foundation.

Home | About | Contact | RSS | EU/EEA Privacy Disclosures
Creative Commons License

Unless otherwise noted, this site and its contents – with the exception of photographs – are licensed under a Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-ND 4.0) license. That means you are free to republish our content both online and in print, and we encourage you to do so via the “republish this article” button. We only ask that you follow a few basic guidelines.