The Ontario Association of Chiefs of Police (OACP) and The Journal of Community Safety and Well-Being (JCSWB) have formed a strategic partnership to promote leading-edge academic research and innovations in Ontario and across Canada.
To provide Ontario police leaders and law enforcement personnel with opportunities to share and pursue the latest research and ideas, the JCSWB invites and encourages all OACP members to:
- Register as a reader: Receive issue publication notifications. Go to: https://journalcswb.ca/index.php/cswb/user/register.
- Register for the e-newsletter, The Dispatch: Designed to ‘Dispatch’ important news and announcements specific to the Journal, continue discussions surrounding important topics, and highlight the valuable contributions from the community. Go to: https://journalcswb.ca/index.php/cswb/Newsletter.
- Expand your knowledge base: Review JCSWB’s freely available archives for research that spans all human service and criminal justice sectors. Go to: https://journalcswb.ca/index.php/cswb/issue/archive.
- Submit your manuscript: The Journal publishes Original Research, Reviews, Social Innovation, Commentaries, and more. For information about the benefits of publishing with the JCSWB, go to: https://journalcswb.ca/index.php/cswb/WhySubmit.
- Become a reviewer: Reviewers help authors strengthen their work by reading and critiquing articles that are submitted to the JCSWB. Getting involved as a reviewer can help you expand your subject matter knowledge, obtain greater insight into the peer review process, and gain valuable experience in academic publishing. To register, go to: https://journalcswb.ca/index.php/cswb/ForReviewers.
About the Journal of CSWB
Established in 2016, the JCSWB is a peer-reviewed and open access publication that is positioned to be the authoritative global resource for high-impact research that, uniquely, spans all human service and criminal justice sectors, with an emphasis on their intersections and collaborations. The Journal showcases the latest research, whether originating from within Canada or from around the world, that is relevant to Canadian and international communities and professionals. Learn more.
Vision: Improved social equity and well-being outcomes for individuals, families, and communities, everywhere.
Mission: To advance knowledge, evidence, and dialogue to support the considered adoption of public policy, the sustainability of related practices, and the best principles of multi-sector collaboration, at the intersections among health, education, human services and criminal justice systems. Our core principles are reflected in the four primary Editorial Sections that further underpin this mission: Trust, Strengths, Services and Justice.