The International Criminal Court's founding treaty, the Rome Statute was implemented on July 17th 1998 and is celebrated on its anniversary each year on this day.
Justice is a key element of SDG16 (Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions) which seeks to promote a just world, with the ultimate goal of bringing peace and security to everyone across the planet.
Researchers at Springer Nature realize the impact their work can have, and here you can find an exclusive collection of the latest research from across disciplines and imprints in order to help make these goals a reality.
How to Stop School Rampage KillingFeatured chapter: | Confronting Gun Violence in AmericaFeatured chapter: | Mass Shootings in Central and Eastern EuropeFeatured chapter: Quantitative Analysis of Mass Shootings in Central and Eastern Europe |
The Indian Ocean as a New Political and Security RegionFeatured chapter: | Corporate Compliance on a Global ScaleFeatured chapter: | Cybercrime in ContextFeatured chapter: |
Trends and Challenges in International LawFeatured chapter: | Fundamental Challenges to Global Peace and SecurityFeatured chapter: Introduction: Securing the Future of Humanity in Challenging Times | Rethinking Knife CrimeFeatured chapter: |
Armed and considered capable? Law enforcement officers' attitudes about armed teacher policies in the USAfrom Crime Prevention and Community Safety | U.S. Security Policy: The Dual-Use Regulation of Cryptography and its Effects on Surveillancefrom European Journal for Security Research | Fifteen Minutes per Day Keeps the Violence Away: a Crossover Randomised Controlled Trial on the Impact of Foot Patrols on Serious Violence in Large Hot Spot Areasfrom Cambridge Journal of Evidence-Based Policing | Alerting Consciences to reduce cybercrime: a quasi-experimental design using warning bannersfrom Experimental Criminology |
Lost in paradise? The perception of security among immigrant communities in Switzerland and its correlatesfrom Crime Prevention and Community Safety | The degrowth movement and crime preventionfrom Crime, Law and Social Change |
Plural Approaches to Theorizing Justice and Legitimacy in Europefrom Res Publica | A Global Study of Police Administrators' Perceptions of the Effectiveness or Organizational Changes During the COVID-19 Pandemicfrom International Criminology | Shifting Interpretation in International Court of Justice’s Decision in the Islamic Republic of Iran v. United States of America: A Deliberate Step?from Liverpool Law Review | Corruption tolerance as a process of moral, social, and political cognition: evidence from Latin Americafrom Crime, Law and Social Change |
The decision to prevent robbery: the perspectives of Serbian robbersfrom Crime Prevention and Community Safety | When the Islamic State Kills: Ironies of American and ISIS Executionsfrom Critical Criminology | Local government public space CCTV systems in Australiafrom Crime Prevention and Community Safety | How Eritreans plan, fund and manage irregular migration, and the extend of involvement of 'organised crime'from Crime Prevention and Community Safety |
Getting started publishing your SDG 16 work at Springer Nature is easy. Springer Nature aspires to lead in publishing SDG research, and especially in open access (OA) SDG research.
You can add impact and power to your SDG-related research when you publish it at Springer Nature, and alongside leading research (like the examples above). Research published OA at Springer Nature gets more exposure. For example, research published in fully OA Springer Nature journals are downloaded over 7,000 times on average (up to 5x more than competitors) and cited 7.39 times on average.