McKillop Library

Internet Links to
ADMINISTRATION OF JUSTICE

In addition to our subject guide, there are numerous websites that provide information on the Administration of Justice. Here are some links including government and organization sites:

  • United States Department of Justice
    The United States Department of Justice website provides government initiatives, news, annual reports and other documents related to the justice field.
  • National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD)
    The National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD) preserves and distributes computerized crime and justice data from Federal agencies, state agencies, and investigator initiated research projects to users for secondary statistical analysis.
  • SEARCH
    SEARCH prepares and publishes national research, analytical and survey reports and bulletins on a range of timely issues in criminal justice information management, technology, and law and policy.
  • Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics
    The Sourcebook of Criminal Justice Statistics brings together data from more than 100 sources about many aspects of criminal justice in the United States.
  • National Criminal Justice Reference Service (NCJRS)
    NCJRS is a federally funded resource offering justice and substance abuse information to support research, policy, and program development worldwide.
  • Terrorism Research Center
    Terrorism Research Center, Inc. (TRC) is an independent institute dedicated to the research of terrorism, information warfare and security, critical infrastructure protection and other issues of low-intensity political violence and gray-area phenomena.
  • Center for American and International Law
    The Center for American and International Law is an international nonprofit educational institution dedicated to improving the quality of justice through continuing education to lawyers and law enforcement officials in the United States and throughout the world.
  • American Judicature Society
    The American Judicature Society works to maintain the independence and integrity of the courts and increase public understanding of the justice system.


Send comments or questions to Olga Verbeek, Library Webmaster, at verbeeko@salve.edu.
Revised: August, 2004