Open Society and Soros Foundation
Past Events

How to Reduce Crime and Improve Race Relations

Location: OSI-New York
Event Date: May 18, 2009
Speakers: Mark Schoofs, Tracey Meares

On Chicago's violence-ridden West Side, Tracey Meares was the lead researcher on an intervention that helped slash homicide and recidivism rates by about a third. What's more, the program avoided much of the police–community antagonism that plagues many efforts to lower crime. Why? Because Meares, a professor at Yale Law School, put into practice her academic theory, which focuses not on why people break the law, but on why people obey it.

Meares discussed the Chicago intervention and a new national effort to scale up interventions like hers across the country.

Open Society Fellow Mark Schoofs introduced the event.

More from Open Society Fellows

How to Engage Authoritarian Regimes: The Case of Burma
OSI-New York
October 28, 2009
At this Open Society Fellowship Program event, three distinguished speakers address how the international community can promote peace and human rights in Burma.

Transitional Justice and Liberia's Truth and Reconciliation Commission
OSI-New York
September 28, 2009
Open Society Fellow Jonny Steinberg discusses transitional justice in Liberia and the findings of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

Online Investigative Reporting in Colombia
OSI-New York
July 23, 2009
Open Society Fellow Juanita Leon discusses her efforts to launch Colombia’s first website devoted to investigative journalism.

You can access this page at the following URL:
http://www.soros.org/initiatives/fellowship/events/meares_20090518

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