(B)
conduct research or evaluation in juvenile justice matters, for the purpose of providing research and evaluation relating to—
(i)
the prevention, reduction, and control of juvenile delinquency and serious crime committed by juveniles;
(ii)
the link between juvenile delinquency and the incarceration of members of the families of juveniles;
(iii)
successful efforts to prevent status offenders and first-time minor offenders from subsequent involvement with the juvenile justice and criminal justice systems;
(iv)
successful efforts to prevent recidivism;
(v)
the juvenile justice system;
(vii)
the prevalence and duration of behavioral health needs (including mental health, substance abuse, and co-occurring disorders) among juveniles pre-placement and post-placement in the juvenile justice system, including an examination of the effects of secure detention in a correctional facility;
(viii)
reducing the proportion of juveniles detained or confined in secure detention facilities, secure correctional facilities, jails, and lockups who are members of minority groups;
(ix)
training efforts and reforms that have produced reductions in or elimination of the use of dangerous practices;
(x)
methods to improve the recruitment, selection, training, and retention of professional personnel who are focused on the prevention, identification, and treatment of delinquency;
(xi)
methods to improve the identification and response to victims of domestic child sex trafficking within the juvenile justice system;
(xii)
identifying positive outcome measures, such as attainment of employment and educational degrees, that States and units of local government should use to evaluate the success of programs aimed at reducing recidivism of youth who have come in contact with the juvenile justice system or criminal justice system;
(xiii)
evaluating the impact and outcomes of the prosecution and sentencing of juveniles as adults;
(xiv)
successful and cost-effective efforts by States and units of local government to reduce recidivism through policies that provide for consideration of appropriate alternative sanctions to incarceration of youth facing nonviolent charges, while ensuring that public safety is preserved;
(xvi)
1
So in original. There is no cl. (xv).
evaluating services, treatment, and aftercare placement of juveniles who were under the care of the State child protection system before their placement in the juvenile justice system;
(xvii)
determining—
(I)
the frequency, seriousness, and incidence of drug use by youth in schools and communities in the States using, if appropriate, data submitted by the States pursuant to this subparagraph and subsection (b); and
(II)
the frequency, degree of harm, and morbidity of violent incidents, particularly firearm-related injuries and fatalities, by youth in schools and communities in the States, including information with respect to—
(aa)
the relationship between victims and perpetrators;
(bb)
demographic characteristics of victims and perpetrators; and
(cc)
the type of weapons used in incidents, as classified in the Uniform Crime Reports of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and
(xviii)
other purposes consistent with the purposes of this subchapter and subchapter I.