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		<citation>
			<titlStmt>
				<titl>Metadata record for Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) Program in the United States, 2000</titl>
			</titlStmt>
			<prodStmt>
				<producer abbr="ICPSR">
					<ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/images/icpsr-logo.gif" title="ICPSR Logo" role="image" /> 
					Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
					<ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/ICPSR/" title="URL of ICPSR Web Site" />
				</producer>
				<copyright>
					ICPSR metadata records are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License <ExtLink URI="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/us/" title="Link to full text of license" />.
				</copyright>
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			<verStmt>
				
				<version date="2013-05-23">2013-05-23</version>
			</verStmt>
			
			
				<holdings URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/ICPSR/ddi2/studies/3270"></holdings>
			
		</citation>
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	<stdyDscr>
       <citation>
           <titlStmt>
             <titl>Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) Program in the United States, 2000</titl>
 				
             <IDNo agency="ICPSR">3270</IDNo>
             <IDNo agency="CrossRef">10.3886/ICPSR03270.v1</IDNo>
           </titlStmt>
           <rspStmt>
    	
			<AuthEnty affiliation="United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice">United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice</AuthEnty>
    	
           </rspStmt>
           <prodStmt>
				
    				
    					<fundAg>United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice</fundAg>
    				
				

    	
    		<grantNo agency="United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice">OJP-98-C-001</grantNo>
    	

           </prodStmt>
           <distStmt>
             <distrbtr abbr="ICPSR" affiliation="Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan" URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/ICPSR/">
               <ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/images/icpsr-logo.gif" title="Logo" />
               Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
               <ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/ICPSR/" title="URL" />
             </distrbtr>
             <distDate date="2001-12-21">2001-12-21</distDate>
           </distStmt>

           <serStmt>
             <serName ID="Series00110">Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) Program/Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) Series</serName>
           </serStmt>


    	
           <verStmt>
           
             <version date="2006-03-30">2006-03-30</version> 
             
             <notes>2006-03-30 File UG3270.ALL.PDF was removed from any previous datasets and flagged as a study-level file, so that it will accompany all downloads.</notes>
           </verStmt>
    	


           <biblCit>United States Department of Justice. Office of Justice Programs. National Institute of Justice. Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) Program in the United States, 2000. ICPSR03270-v1. Ann Arbor, MI: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research [distributor], 2001. doi:10.3886/ICPSR03270.v1</biblCit>

				<holdings URI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR03270.v1"></holdings>


        </citation>
      <stdyInfo>
           <subject>
		
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">ADAM/DUF Program</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">alcohol abuse</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">arrests</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">crime patterns</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">demographic characteristics</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug dependence</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug offenders</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug related crimes</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug testing</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug treatment</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drug use</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">drugs</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">substance abuse</keyword>
      	
      		<keyword vocab="thesaurus">trends</keyword>
      	
		
      		<topcClas source="archive" vocab="ICPSR subject classifications">ICPSR.XVII.E</topcClas>
      	
      		<topcClas source="archive" vocab="NAHDAP subject classifications">NAHDAP.I</topcClas>
      	
      		<topcClas source="archive" vocab="NACJD subject classifications">NACJD.XI</topcClas>
      	
           </subject>
          <abstract>Beginning in 1996, the National Institute of Justice (NIJ)
initiated a major redesign of its multisite drug-monitoring program,
the Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) system (DRUG USE FORECASTING IN 24
CITIES IN THE UNITED STATES, 1987-1997 [ICPSR 9477]). The program was
retitled Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) (see ARRESTEE DRUG
ABUSE MONITORING (ADAM) PROGRAM IN THE UNITED STATES, 1998 [ICPSR
2628] and 1999 [ICPSR 2994]). ADAM extended DUF in the number of sites
and improved the quality and generalizability of the data. The
redesign was fully implemented in all sites beginning in the first
quarter of 2000. The ADAM program implemented a new and expanded adult
instrument in the first quarter of 2000, which was used for both the
male (Part 1) and female (Part 2) data. The juvenile data for 2000
(Part 3) used the juvenile instrument from previous years. The ADAM
program also moved to probability-based sampling for the adult male
population during 2000. Therefore, the 2000 adult male sample includes
weights, generated through post-sampling stratification of the
data. The shift to sampling of the adult male population in 2000
required that all 35 sites move to a common catchment area, the
county. The core instrument for the adult cases was supplemented by a
facesheet, which was used to collect demographic and charge
information from official records. Core instruments were used to
collect self-report information from the respondent. Both the adult
and juvenile instruments were administered to persons arrested and
booked on local or state charges relevant to the jurisdiction (i.e.,
not federal or out-of-county charges) within the past 48 hours. At the
completion of the interview the arrestee was asked to voluntarily
provide a urine specimen. An external lab used the Enzyme Multiplied
Immunoassay Testing (EMIT) protocols to test for the presence of ten
drugs or metabolites of the drug in the urine sample. All amphetamine
positives were confirmed by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry
(GC/MS) to determine whether methamphetamine was used. For the adult
data, variables from the facesheet include arrest precinct, ZIP code
of arrest location, ZIP code of respondent's address, respondent's
gender and race, three most serious arrest charges, sample source
(stock, flow, other), interview status (including reason the
individual selected in the sample was not interviewed), language of
instrument used, and the number of hours since arrest. Demographic
information from the core instrument includes respondent's age,
ethnicity, residency, education, employment, health insurance
coverage, marital status, housing, and telephone access. Variables
from the calendar provide information on inpatient and outpatient
substance abuse treatment, inpatient mental health treatment, arrests
and incarcerations, heavy alcohol use, use of marijuana, crack/rock
cocaine, powder cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, and other drug (ever
and previous 12 months), age of first use of the above six drugs and
heavy alcohol use, drug dependency in the previous 12 months,
characteristics of drug transactions in past 30 days, use of
marijuana, crack/rock cocaine, powder cocaine, heroin, and
methamphetamine in past 30 days, 7 days, and 48 hours, heavy alcohol
use in past 30 days, and secondary drug use of 15 other drugs in the
past 48 hours. Urine test results are provided for 11 drugs --
marijuana, cocaine, opiates, phencyclidine (PCP), benzodiazepines
(Valium), propoxyphene (Darvon), methadone, methaqualone,
barbiturates, amphetamines, and methamphetamine. The adult data files
include several derived variables. The male data also include four
sampling weights, and stratum identifications and percents. For the
juvenile data, demographic variables include age, race, sex,
educational attainment, employment status, and living
circumstances. Data also include each juvenile arrestee's
self-reported use of 15 drugs (alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, powder
cocaine, crack, heroin, PCP, amphetamines, barbiturates, quaaludes,
methadone, crystal methamphetamine, Valium, LSD, and inhalants). For
each drug type, arrestees reported whether they had ever used the
drug, age of first use, whether they had used the drug in the past 30
days and past 72 hours, number of days they used the drug in past
month, whether they tried to cut down or quit using the drug, if they
were successful, whether they felt dependent on the drug, whether they
were receiving treatment for the drug, whether they had received
treatment for the drug in the past, and whether they thought they
could use treatment for that drug. Additional variables include
whether juvenile respondents had ever injected drugs, whether they
were influenced by drugs when they allegedly committed the crime for
which they were arrested, whether they had been to an emergency room
for drug-related incidents, and if so, whether in the past 12 months,
and information on arrests and charges in the past 12 months. As with
the adult data, urine test results are also provided. Finally,
variables covering precinct (precinct of arrest) and law (penal law
code associated with the crime for which the juvenile was arrested)
are also provided for use by local law enforcement officials at each
site.</abstract>
 			
           <abstract>Beginning in 1996, the National Institute of
 Justice (NIJ) initiated a major redesign of its multisite
 drug-monitoring program, the Drug Use Forecasting (DUF) system (DRUG
 USE FORECASTING IN 24 CITIES IN THE UNITED STATES, 1987-1997 [ICPSR
 9477]). The program was retitled Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM)
 (see ARRESTEE DRUG ABUSE MONITORING (ADAM) PROGRAM IN THE UNITED
 STATES, 1998 [ICPSR 2628] and 1999 [ICPSR 2994]). ADAM extended DUF in
 the number of sites and improved the quality and generalizability of
 the data. The redesign was fully implemented beginning in the first
 quarter of 2000. The original goal remained the same -- to determine
 the extent of drug use in the arrestee population in a defined area at
 specified points each year. However, the redesigned sampling protocol
 and instrument extended ADAM's goals in the following ways: (1) to
 provide a suitable probability-based sample of jails and arrestees to
 support prevalence estimates of drug use and related behaviors in each
 county included in the ADAM program, (2) to provide accurate estimates
 with confidence intervals that permit tests of the significance of
 drug use trends, (3) to create a standardized dataset on arrestees in
 multiple jurisdictions to allow cross-site comparisons, (4) to expand
 the scope of DUF data to include other areas of concern (treatment
 history, dependency/abuse assessment, drug markets), (5) to provide a
 platform for distinguishing between arrest and drug use practices and
 for drawing inferences about the total population of hardcore or heavy
 drug users, including those not in the current ADAM sample, (6) to
 provide data for policy responses to substance abuse issues both
 locally and nationally, (7) to investigate drug markets or purchases,
 including data on characteristics of the market, conditions of
 purchase or exchange, and prices paid, (8) to assess risk of alcohol
 and/or drug dependency, drug and mental health treatment experiences,
 and (9) to use common definitions and, where possible, identical
 questions and response categories to allow meaningful links between
ADAM and other national data systems.</abstract>
           
 			
           <abstract>The ADAM program implemented a new and expanded
 adult instrument in the first quarter of 2000, which was used for both
 the male (Part 1) and female (Part 2) data. The juvenile data for 2000
 (Part 3) used the juvenile instrument from previous years. The ADAM
 program also moved to a probability-based sampling for the adult male
 population during 2000. Therefore, the 2000 adult male sample includes
 weights, generated through post-sampling stratification of the
 data. The shift to sampling of the adult male population in 2000
 required that all 35 sites move to a common catchment area, the
 county. ADAM sites in 2000 included Albuquerque (Bernalillo County),
 Anchorage (Anchorage Borough), Atlanta (Fulton and DeKalb Counties),
 Birmingham (Jefferson County), Capital Area (Albany County, New York),
 Charlotte-Metro (Mecklenburg County), Chicago (Cook County), Cleveland
 (Cuyahoga County), Dallas (Dallas County), Denver (Denver County), Des
 Moines (Polk County), Detroit (Wayne County), Ft. Lauderdale (Broward
 County), Honolulu (Oahu County), Houston (Harris County), Indianapolis
 (Marion County), Laredo (Webb County), Las Vegas (Clark County), Los
 Angeles (Los Angeles County), Miami (Miami-Dade County), Minneapolis
 (Hennepin County), New Orleans (Orleans Parish), New York (Manhattan
 Borough), Oklahoma City (Oklahoma County), Omaha (Douglas County),
 Philadelphia (Philadelphia County), Phoenix (Maricopa County),
 Portland (Multnomah County), Sacramento (Sacramento County), Salt Lake
 City (Salt Lake County), San Antonio (Bexar County), San Diego (San
 Diego County), San Jose (Santa Clara County), Seattle (King County),
 Spokane (Spokane County), and Tuscon (Pima County). The core
 instrument for the adult cases was supplemented by a facesheet, which
 was used to collect demographic and charge information from official
 records. Core instruments were used to collect self-report information
 from the respondent. Both the adult and juvenile instruments were
 administered to persons arrested and booked on local or state charges
 relevant to the jurisdiction (i.e., not federal or out-of-county
 charges) within the past 48 hours. Trained interviewers used a paper
 and pencil instrument in a face-to-face setting in a secure and
 reasonably private area of the booking facility. The adult interview
 took an average of 20 minutes. The juvenile interview took an average
 of 5 minutes. Responses were recorded by the interviewer at the time
 of the interview. At the completion of the interview, the arrestee was
 asked to voluntarily provide a urine specimen. The adult male and
 female data reflect all the arrestees selected for an interview from
 the booking logs, including those for whom only facesheet information
 was collected. The final sample for each adult data file, however, is
 the subset of arrestees that accepted and completed an interview. An
 external lab used the Enzyme Multiplied Immunoassay Testing (EMIT)
 protocols to test for the presence of ten drugs or metabolites of the
 drug in the urine sample. All amphetamine positives were confirmed by
 gas chromatography/mass spectrometry (GC/MS) to determine whether
 methamphetamine was used. Local booking facilities provide a census of
 all adult males arrested in each facility collecting data for the time
 period of data collection in the target county. The census data are
 not in the public file but were used to develop sampling weights for
the male data.</abstract>
           
 			
          <abstract>For the adult data, variables from the facesheet
 include arrest precinct, ZIP code of arrest location, ZIP code of
 respondent's address, respondent's gender and race, three most serious
 arrest charges, sample source (stock, flow, other), interview status
 (including reason the individual selected was not interviewed),
 language of instrument used, and the number of hours since
 arrest. Demographic information from the core instrument includes
 respondent's age, ethnicity, residency, education, employment, health
 insurance coverage, marital status, housing, and telephone
 access. Variables from the calendar provide information on inpatient
 and outpatient substance abuse treatment, inpatient mental health
 treatment, arrests and incarcerations, heavy alcohol use, use of
 marijuana, crack/rock cocaine, powder cocaine, heroin,
 methamphetamine, and other drug (ever and previous 12 months), age of
 first use of the above six drugs and heavy alcohol use, drug
 dependency in the previous 12 months, characteristics of drug
 transactions in past 30 days, use of marijuana, crack/rock cocaine,
 powder cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine in past 30 days, 7 days,
 and 48 hours, heavy alcohol use in past 30 days, and secondary drug
 use of 15 other drugs in the past 48 hours. Urine test results are
 provided for 11 drugs -- marijuana, cocaine, opiates, phencyclidine
 (PCP), benzodiazepines (Valium), propoxyphene (Darvon), methadone,
 methaqualone, barbiturates, amphetamines, and methamphetamine. The
 adult data files include several derived variables. The male data also
 include four sampling weights, and stratum identifications and
 percents. For the juvenile data, demographic variables include age,
 race, sex, educational attainment, employment status, and living
 circumstances. Data also include each juvenile arrestee's
 self-reported use of 15 drugs (alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, powder
 cocaine, crack, heroin, PCP, amphetamines, barbiturates, quaaludes,
 methadone, crystal methamphetamine, Valium, LSD, and inhalants). For
 each drug type, arrestees reported whether they had ever used the
 drug, age of first use, whether they had used the drug in the past 30
 days and past 72 hours, number of days they used the drug in past
 month, whether they tried to cut down or quit using the drug, if they
 were successful, whether they felt dependent on the drug, whether they
 were receiving treatment for the drug, whether they had received
 treatment for the drug in the past, and whether they thought they
 could use treatment for that drug. Additional variables include
 whether juvenile respondents had ever injected drugs, whether they
 were influenced by drugs when they allegedly committed the crime for
 which they were arrested, whether they had been to an emergency room
 for drug-related incidents, and if so, whether in the past 12 months,
 and information on arrests and charges in the past 12 months. As with
 the adult data, urine test results are also provided. Finally,
 variables covering precinct (precinct of arrest) and law (penal law
 code associated with the crime for which the juvenile was arrested)
 are also provided for use by local law enforcement officials at each
site.</abstract>
          
           <sumDscr>
           
		
		
				
      		<timePrd event="start" date="2000-01-01" cycle="P1">2000-01-01</timePrd>
      		<timePrd event="end" date="2000-12-31" cycle="P1">2000-12-31</timePrd>
			
			
      		
      		
      	
		
 		
				
      		<collDate event="start" date="2000-01-01" cycle="P1">2000-01-01</collDate>
      		<collDate event="end" date="2000-12-31" cycle="P1">2000-12-31</collDate>
			
			
      		
      	
    	
    		<geogCover>United States</geogCover>
    	
    	
    	
    		<anlyUnit>Individual arrestees</anlyUnit>
    	
	    	
	    		<universe>All persons arrested and booked on local and state charges
in the 35 ADAM counties in the United States during 2000.</universe>
	    	
	    	
	    		<dataKind>administrative records data</dataKind>
	    	
	    		<dataKind>clinical data</dataKind>
	    	
	    		<dataKind>medical records</dataKind>
	    	
	    		<dataKind>survey data</dataKind>
	    	
           </sumDscr>
       </stdyInfo>
       <method>
           <dataColl>

             <sampProc>Part 1: Probability-based sampling, Parts 2-3: Convenience
samples.</sampProc>
            



             <sources>
             
    		<dataSrc>administrative records, personal interviews, and
clinical records</dataSrc>
    	
             </sources>
             
    	

		<cleanOps><p>ICPSR data undergo a confidentiality review and are altered when necessary to limit the risk of 
	disclosure. ICPSR also routinely creates ready-to-go data files along with setups in the major 
	statistical software formats as well as standard codebooks to accompany the data. In addition to 
	these procedures, ICPSR performed the following processing steps for this data collection:</p><list type="bulleted">
	<itm>Checked for undocumented or out-of-range codes.</itm>
	</list>
	</cleanOps>
	
           </dataColl>

           <notes>Users are strongly encouraged to obtain copies of
the "Methodology Guide for ADAM" and the "Analytic Guide for ADAM"
from the ADAM Web site at <a href="http://www.adam-nij.net/">
http://www.adam-nij.net/</a>.</notes>

           <notes>The ADAM program changes implemented
in 2000 will continue during the 2001 collection. Because of the above
changes to the ADAM program, analysts must be careful when comparing
previous DUF and ADAM data to the 2000 data, especially for male
arrestees.</notes>

           <notes>Local area estimates, national estimates, and
inferences about the total population of hardcore or heavy drug users,
including those not in the current ADAM sample, are possible with the
new ADAM sampling design. The latter two items will be described in
detail in forthcoming publications.</notes>


          <anlyInfo>

               <respRate>
               
    		The ability to provide a true response rate will
 not be available until the 2002 data collection. However, the data do
 contain information on interview and urine specimen status. For the
 male data, 56.3 percent agreed to an interview, 13.6 percent declined,
 22.8 percent were not available at the time of their selection, and
 7.3 percent were not approached. Of the male arrestees who were
 interviewed, 89.9 percent provided a urine sample. For the female
 data, 61.9 percent agreed to be interviewed, 14.6 percent declined,
 14.8 percent were not available, and 8.7 percent were not
 approached. Of the female arrestees who were interviewed, 89.4 percent
 provided a urine specimen. For the juvenile data, only those who
 agreed to an interview and provided a urine sample are included in the
 file. Response rates vary across sites but generally fall in the 80
 percent to 85 percent range. This includes agreement to the interview
and providing a urine sample.
    	
    	</respRate>
    	

               <dataAppr>None.</dataAppr>
              
          </anlyInfo>
       </method>
       <dataAccs>
           <setAvail media="online">
			
			
             <accsPlac URI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3886/ICPSR03270.v1">Ann Arbor, Mi.: Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</accsPlac>
			
            </setAvail>
           <useStmt>
                <specPerm>Additional special permissions, where applicable, are described in the restrictions
                field.</specPerm>
                
                <restrctn>The data are restricted from general dissemination.
 Users are advised that starting in October 1998, the
 National Institute of Justice requested that all data in this
 collection be restricted and made available only by special
 arrangement with the staff of the National Archive of Criminal Justice
 Data (NACJD) at ICPSR. These additional access restrictions to protect
 confidentiality have become necessary as the revised Drug Use
 Forecasting (DUF) program, renamed the Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring
 (ADAM) Program in 1997, began moving into smaller cities and continues
 to collect geographic (ZIP code) and other detailed information. Users
 interested in obtaining the DUF/ADAM data must request and complete a
 Data Transfer Agreement Form and fully specify the reasons they need
 the data. A copy of the Data Transfer Agreement Form can be requested
 by calling 800-999-0960 or 734-647-5000. The Data Transfer Agreement
 Form is also available as a Portable Document Format (PDF) file from
 the NACJD Web site at
 <a href="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/NACJD/Private/private.pdf">
 http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/NACJD/Private/private.pdf</a>. Completed
 forms should be returned to: Director, National Archive of Criminal
 Justice Data, Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social
 Research, Institute for Social Research, P.O. Box 1248, University of
 Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106-1248, or by fax: 734-647-8200. More
 information about the DUF/ADAM Programs can be obtained by visiting
 the ADAM Web site at <a href="http://www.adam-nij.net/">
http://www.adam-nij.net/</a>.</restrctn>
                
 <conditions>
 	





<p>Please read the terms of use below. If you agree to them, click on the "I Agree" button to proceed. If you do not agree, you can click on the "I Do Not Agree" button to return to the home page.</p> <p>ICPSR adheres to the principles of the Data Seal of Approval <ExtLink URI="http://www.datasealofapproval.org/"/>, which, in part, require the data consumer to comply with access regulations imposed both by law and by the data repository, and to conform to codes of conduct that are generally accepted in higher education and scientific research for the exchange of knowledge and information. </p> <p>These data are distributed under the following terms of use, which are governed by ICPSR. By continuing past this point to the data retrieval process, you signify your agreement to comply with the requirements stated below:</p> <head n="2">Privacy of RESEARCH SUBJECTS</head> <p>Any intentional identification of a RESEARCH SUBJECT (whether an individual or an organization) or unauthorized disclosure of his or her confidential information violates the PROMISE OF CONFIDENTIALITY given to the providers of the information. Therefore, users of data agree:</p> <list type="bulleted"> <itm><p>To use these datasets solely for research or statistical purposes and not for investigation of specific RESEARCH SUBJECTS, except when identification is authorized in writing by ICPSR (netmail@icpsr.umich.edu <ExtLink URI="mailto:netmail@icpsr.umich.edu"/> )</p></itm> <itm><p>To make no use of the identity of any RESEARCH SUBJECT discovered inadvertently, and to advise ICPSR of any such discovery (netmail@icpsr.umich.edu <ExtLink URI="mailto:netmail@icpsr.umich.edu"/> )</p></itm> </list> <head n="2">Redistribution of Data</head> <p>You agree not to redistribute data or other materials without the written agreement of ICPSR, unless: </p> <list type="ordered"> <itm><p>You serve as the OFFICIAL or DESIGNATED REPRESENTATIVE at an ICPSR MEMBER INSTITUTION and are assisting AUTHORIZED USERS with obtaining data, or</p></itm> <itm><p>You are collaborating with other AUTHORIZED USERS to analyze the data for research or instructional purposes.</p></itm> </list> <p>When sharing data or other materials in these approved ways, you must include all accompanying files with the data, including terms of use. More information on  permission to redistribute data <ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/icpsrweb/content/datamanagement/policies/redistribute.html"/> can be found on the ICPSR Web site.</p> <head n="2">Citing Data</head> <p>You agree to reference the recommended bibliographic citation in any publication that employs resources provided by ICPSR. Authors of publications based on ICPSR data are required to send citations of their published works to ICPSR for inclusion in a database of related publications (bibliography@icpsr.umich.edu <ExtLink URI="mailto:bibliography@icpsr.umich.edu"/>) .</p> <head n="2">Disclaimer</head> <p>You acknowledge that the original collector of the data, ICPSR, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.</p> <head n="2">Violations</head> <p>If ICPSR determines that the terms of this agreement have been violated, ICPSR will act according to our policy on terms of use violations <ExtLink URI="http://www.icpsr.umich.edu/ICPSR/support/faqs/2008/10/what-are-consequences-of-violating"/>. Sanctions can include:</p> <list type="bulleted"> <itm><p>ICPSR may revoke the existing agreement, demand the return of the data in question, and deny all future access to ICPSR data.</p></itm> <itm><p>The violation may be reported to the Research Integrity Officer, Institutional Review Board, or Human Subjects Review Committee of the user's institution. A range of sanctions are available to institutions including revocation of tenure and termination.</p></itm> <itm><p>If the confidentiality of human subjects has been violated, the case may be reported to the Federal Office for Human Research Protections. This may result in an investigation of the user's institution, which can result in institution-wide sanctions including the suspension of all research grants. </p></itm> <itm><p>A court may award the payment of damages to any individual(s)/organization(s) harmed by the breach of the agreement.</p></itm> </list> <head n="2">Definitions</head> <list type="bulleted"><itm><hi>authorized user</hi> - A faculty member, staff member, or student at a member institution</itm><itm><hi>ICPSR</hi> - Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research</itm><itm><hi>member institution</hi> - An institutional member of ICPSR</itm><itm><hi>Official/Designated Representative</hi> - An individual appointed to represent a university's interests in ICPSR. This individual is also charged with providing user support to campus users. </itm><itm><hi>promise of confidentiality</hi> - A promise to a respondent or research participant that the information the respondent provides will not be disseminated without the permission of the respondent; that the fact that the respondent participated in the study will not be disclosed; and that disseminated information will include no linkages to the identity of the respondent. Such a promise encompasses traditional notions of both confidentiality and anonymity. Names and other identifying information regarding respondents, proxies, or other persons on whom the respondent or proxy provides information, are presumed to be confidential.</itm><itm><hi>research subject</hi> - A person or organization observed for purposes of research. Also called a respondent. A respondent is generally a survey respondent or informant, experimental or observational subject, focus group participant, or any other person providing information to a study or on whose behalf a proxy provides information. </itm></list><p>In addition, the National Archive of Criminal Justice Data stipulates the following conditions:</p> <p>Federal law and regulations require that research data collected by the U.S. Department of Justice or by its grantees and contractors may only be used for research or statistical purposes. The applicable laws and regulations may be found in the United States Code, 42 USC Section 3789g(a), the Code of Federal Regulations, 28 CFR 22, and 62 F.R. 35044 (June 27, 1997) (The Federal Confidentiality Order). Accordingly, any intentional identification or disclosure of a person or establishment may violate federal law as well as the assurances of confidentiality given to the providers of the information. Therefore, users of data collected by or with the support from the U.S. Department of Justice and distributed by NACJD or other ICPSR archives must agree to abide by these regulations and understand that ICPSR may report any potential violation to the U.S. Department of Justice.</p>




 
 
 			
                
					<p>AVAILABLE.  This study is freely available to the general public.</p>
                
                  
                
                
                </conditions>
                <disclaimer>The original collector of the data, ICPSR, and the relevant funding agency bear no 
                responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
                </disclaimer>
           </useStmt>
       </dataAccs>
			
     </stdyDscr>
		
    	 	
    			<fileDscr ID="F1">
          			<fileTxt ID="Part1">
               			<fileName>Adult Male Arrestee Data with Weights</fileName>
           			</fileTxt>
     			</fileDscr>
 			
    			<fileDscr ID="F2">
          			<fileTxt ID="Part2">
               			<fileName>Adult Female Arrestee Data</fileName>
           			</fileTxt>
     			</fileDscr>
 			
    			<fileDscr ID="F3">
          			<fileTxt ID="Part3">
               			<fileName>Juvenile Arrestee Data</fileName>
           			</fileTxt>
     			</fileDscr>
 			
 		
 
 
</codeBook>
