Note:
This awardee has received supplemental funding. This award detail page includes information about the supplemental awards but the information about the original award is unavailable.
Award Information
Description of original award (Fiscal Year 2014, $100,000)
This program furthers the Department's mission by providing grants and cooperative agreements for research and evaluation activities to organizations that OJJDP designates.
The Rochester Youth Development Study (RYDS) is an ongoing panel study designed to examine the causes and consequences of delinquency. This Program of Research on the Causes and Correlates of Delinquency study has followed a sample of high-risk youth since 1988 and has collected extensive information about their involvement in delinquency, violence, drug use, and other problem behaviors. Detailed information has also been collected on many of the basic causes and correlates of these behaviors. The project has also collected extensive information on the study families.
In conjunction with OJJDP staff, the researchers are archiving the project data files to make them available to the broader research community. This allows more analysis of the data for the development of policy and programs to serve the youth of the United States as well as the entire nation, with a special focus on urban populations. The archiving project includes processing the data and preparing documentation, creating data transfer agreements, and transferring data and documentation files to National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD). The RYDS researchers will also work with their partners at OJJDP, NACJD, and the Denver and Pittsburgh projects toward the goal of making the data accessible to other researchers. This will be dependent on developing appropriate procedures for sharing data that ensure confidentiality and are acceptable to the relevant Institutional Review Board(s).
Deliverables for this project period include collaborative development and planning of the data archive itself (along with OJJDP and NACJD), obtaining IRB approval for the data sharing mechanism (after a specific plan for data sharing is developed), and preparation and transfer of two waves of adolescent data and three waves of parent data (along with the associated documentation) to NACJD for the archive. Along with files that will have been transferred in the previous project periods, this will make a total of 12 waves of data (three for parent and nine for student) that will have been transferred by the end of this project period. Progress toward the project goals will be measured by the number of waves of data processed, the number of waves of data transferred, and, in collaboration with the other partners, the development of a plan for sharing data with other researchers.
NCA/NCF