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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Department
    • People
    • Resources & Affiliated Centers
  • Undergraduate
    • Prospective Students
    • Current CCJS Majors
    • Honors Program
    • Undergraduate Research
    • Internships and Career Opportunities
    • Extracurricular Programs
    • CCJS at Shady Grove
  • Graduate
    • CCJS Graduate Studies
    • PhD Program
    • Master's Program
    • Student Resources
  • Research
    • Racial Democracy Crime and Justice Network Small Grants Program
    • Recent Publications
    • Criminal Justice Policy & Practice
    • Criminological Theory Development & Testing
    • Emergent Issues in Crime & Justice
      • Criminology for the 21st Century
    • Statistical Methods & Data Analysis
  • RDCJN

Publications

Capitol Building by Jorge Alcala (https://unsplash.com/@jorgeaalcala)
  • Vélez, M. B., & Peguero, A. A. (2023). LatCrit and Criminology: Toward a Theoretical Understanding of Latino/a/x Crime and Criminal Legal System Involvement. Annual Review of Criminology, 6, 307-338. v_annurev-criminol-030920-120002.pdf405.98 KB
  • Porter, L. C., Testa, A., Kozerra, M., Philippon, C., Remrey, L., Bijole, P., Kattakuzhy, S., Alexander, C.S., and Rosenthal, E.(2022). “I got so much on my plate”: Understanding care discontinuity for HIV and HCV among formerly incarcerated persons. Health Services Research. Health Services Research - 2022 - Porter - I got so much on my plate Understanding care discontinuity for HIV and HCV.pdf750.67 KB
  • Vélez, M. B., & Brunson, R. K. (2022). Centering Race in the Study of Crime and Criminal Justice. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. Velez and Brunson.pdf515.93 KB
  • Braithwaite, J. (2022). Beyond Predatory Peace. Annual Review of Criminology. Braithwaite_annualreview.pdf782.65 KB
  • Brunson, R. K., & Miller, A. (2022). Police Observational Research in the Twenty-First Century. Annual Review of Criminology, 6.
  • Brunson, R. K., Wade, B. A., & Hitchens, B. K. (2022). Examining risky firearm behaviors among high-risk gun carriers in New York City. Preventive Medicine, 107179. Brunson Wade Hitchens.pdf591.34 KB
  • Mitre‐Becerril, D., Tahamont, S., Lerner, J., & Chalfin, A. (2022). Can deterrence persist? Long‐term evidence from a randomized experiment in street lighting. Criminology & Public Policy.
  • Glueck Project Publications July 2022; John H. Laub and Robert J. Sampson publist 2022.pdf186.4 KB
  • Perceptions of White-Collar Crime Seriousness: Unpacking and translating attitudes into policy preferences. Sally S. Simpson, Miranda A. Galvin, Thomas A. Loughran, and Mark A. Cohen. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency.Online first, Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, https://doi.org/10.1177/00224278221092094, May 6, 2022. Simpson_et_al_Perceptions_2022.pdf713.71 KB
  • Hitchens, B. K., Aviles, A. M., & McCallops, K. (2022). Mothering in the streets: Familial adaptation strategies of street‐identified Black American mothers. Journal of Marriage and Family. Hitchens_2022.pdf712.11 KB
  • Bersani, B. E., Jacobsen, W. C., & Doherty, E. E. (2022). Does early adolescent arrest alter the developmental course of offending into young adulthood?. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 1-22. Bersani2022_Article_DoesEarlyAdolescentArrestAlter.pdf1.14 MB
  • Unpacking the Criminogenic Aspects of Stress over the Life Course: The Joint Effects of Proximal Strain and Childhood Abuse on Violence and Substance Use in a High-Risk Sample of Women. Lee Slocum, Jennifer Medel, Elaine Doherty, and Sally S. Simpson. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, first published online, February 15, 2022. Slocum_et_al_2022.pdf1.57 MB
  • LaFree, G. (2022). In the shadow of 9/11: How the study of political extremism has reshaped criminology. Criminology, 60(1), 5-26. Criminology - 2021 - LaFree - In the shadow of 9 11 How the study of political extremism has reshaped criminology.pdf260.82 KB
  • Stewart, R., Watters, B., Horowitz, V., Larson, R. P., Sargent, B., & Uggen, C. (2022). Native Americans and Monetary Sanctions. RSF: The Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social Sciences, 8(2), 137-156. Stewart.pdf1.91 MB
  • Jacobsen, W. C., Ragan, D. T., Yang, M., Nadel, E. L., & Feinberg, M. E. (2021). Arrested Friendships? Justice Involvement and Interpersonal Exclusion among Rural Youth. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency. Jacobsen_arrested_friendships.pdf716.04 KB
  • Wellford, C. and Scott, T. (2021), "Guest editorial", Policing: An International Journal, Vol. 44 No. 4, pp. 541-547.https://doi.org/10.1108/PIJPSM-08-2021-198 10-1108_PIJPSM-08-2021-198.pdf88.38 KB
  • McGloin, J. M., Thomas, K. J., Rowan, Z. R., & Deitzer, J. R. (2021). Can the group disincentivize offending? Considering opt‐out thresholds and decision reversals. Criminology, 59(4), 738-765. Criminology - 2021 - McGloin - Can the group disincentivize offending Considering opt‐out thresholds and decision.pdf734.73 KB
  • Tahamont, S., Jelveh, Z., Chalfin, A., Yan, S., & Hansen, B. (2021). Dude, where’s my treatment effect? errors in administrative data linking and the destruction of statistical power in randomized experiments. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 37(3), 7 Tahamont2021_Article_DudeWhereSMyTreatmentEffectErr.pdf1.55 MB
  • Brunson, R. K., & Stewart, E. A. (2021). In Search of a Critical Mass: Do Black Lives Matter in Criminology and Criminal Justice Programs?. Race and Justice, 11(3), 255-259. Brunson.pdf63.2 KB
  • Midgette, G., & Kilmer, B. (2021). Can novel ‘swift‐certain‐fair’programs work outside of pioneering jurisdictions? An analysis of 24/7 Sobriety in Montana, USA. Addiction, 116(12), 3381-3387. Addiction - 2021 - Midgette - Can novel swift‐certain‐fair programs work outside of pioneering jurisdictions An analysis.pdf204.94 KB
  • Midgette, G., Kilmer, B., Nicosia, N., & Heaton, P. (2021). A natural experiment to test the effect of sanction certainty and celerity on substance-impaired driving: North Dakota’s 24/7 Sobriety Program. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 37(3), 647-670 Midgette2021_Article_ANaturalExperimentToTestTheEff.pdf1.41 MB
  • Porter, L. C., Kozlowski-Serra, M., & Lee, H. (2021). Proliferation or adaptation? Differences across race and sex in the relationship between time served in prison and mental health symptoms. Social Science & Medicine, 276, 113815. Porter_prisons.pdf898.33 KB
  • Ellis, R. (2021). ‘You’re not Serving Time, You’re Serving Christ’: Protestant Religion and Discourses of Responsibilization in a Women’s Prison. The British Journal of Criminology, 61(6), 1647-1664. Ellis_Religion.pdf258.05 KB
  • Xie, M., & Baumer, E. P. (2021). Immigrant status, citizenship, and victimization risk in the United States: New findings from the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS). Criminology, 59(4), 610-644. Criminology - 2021 - Xie - Immigrant status citizenship and victimization risk in the United States New findings from.pdf1.03 MB
  • Equal Pay for Equal Work? Considering the Gender Gap in Illegal Pay. Holly Nguyen, Brandy R. Parker, and Sally S. Simpson. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, (March) 2021. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10940-021-09498-6 Nguyen2022_Article_EqualPayForEqualWorkConsiderin.pdf757.24 KB

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