Curriculum Vitae

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Curriculum Vitae [Updated June 2020] Curriculum Vitae Jonathan Intravia, Ph.D. Ball State University Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology North Quad, 282 Muncie, IN 47306 Phone (office): 765-285-5970 Email: [email protected] Education 2015 Ph.D., Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University Dissertation: Neighborhood Context and Generalized Trust: A Multilevel Mediation Examination of Fear and Police Efficacy. Chair: Dr. Eric A. Stewart 2009 M.A., Criminology, University of South Florida Thesis: The Roles of Social Bonds, Personality, and Rational Decision-Making: An Empirical Investigation into Hirschi’s New Control Theory. Chair: Dr. Shayne Jones 2007 B.A., Criminology, University of South Florida Professional Employment 2020- Associate Professor: Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, Muncie, IN. 2015-2020 Assistant Professor: Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Ball State University, Muncie, IN. 2012-2014 Graduate Instructor: College of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL. 2010-2015 Graduate Research Assistant: College of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University, Tallahassee, FL. Areas of Interest Criminological Theory; Contextual Effects; Violence; Juvenile Delinquency; Public Opinion; Media Effects and Crime Publications (* denotes graduate student co-author) Journal Articles Forth. Rocheleau, Gregory, Anthony Vito, and Jonathan Intravia. “Peers, Perceptions, and E-Cigarettes: A Social Learning Approach to Explaining E- Cigarette Use among Youth.” Journal of Drug Issues. Thompson, Andrew J.*, Justin T. Pickett, and Jonathan Intravia. “Racial Stereotypes, Extended Criminalization, and Support for Breed-Specific Legislation: Experimental and Observational Evidence.” Race and Justice. Intravia, Jonathan, Alex R. Piquero, Nicole Leeper Piquero, and Bryan Byers. “Just Do It? An Examination of Race on Attitudes Associated with Nike’s Advertisement Campaign Featuring Colin Kaepernick.” Deviant Behavior. ^Featured in PsyPost (2019): “Study finds Stark Racial Divides in Attitudes about Nike’s Colin Kaepernick Advertisement” by Eric W. Dolan. 2020 Intravia, Jonathan, Andrew J. Thompson*, and Justin T. Pickett. “Net Legitimacy: Internet and Social Media Exposure on Attitudes toward the Police.” Sociological Spectrum, 40(1), 58-80. Wolff, Kevin T., Jonathan Intravia, Michael T. Baglivio, and Alex R. Piquero. “Adherence to the Street Code Predicts an Earlier Anticipated Death.” Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, 57(2), 139-181. 2019 Intravia, Jonathan, and Justin T. Pickett. “Stereotyping Online? Internet News, Social Media, and the Racial Typification of Crime.” Sociological Forum, 34(3), 616-642. ^Featured in Medium (2019): “How News about Crime Warps Your Brain: And Why it Matters Where You Read it” by Angela Lashbrook. Ho, Taiping, and Jonathan Intravia. “A Comprehensive Analysis of Determinants of Risk Assessment among Youths Adjudicated to Indiana Juvenile Correctional Facilities.” Journal of Applied Juvenile Justice Services, 75-90. Ho, Taiping, and Jonathan Intravia. “Racial Disparities and Similarities in Risk Assessment among Adjudicated Juveniles.” Justice Policy Journal, 16(1), 1-19. Intravia, Jonathan. “Investigating the Influence of Social Media Consumption on Punitive Attitudes among a Sample of U.S. University Students.” International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 63(2), 309-333. Intravia 2 Craig, Jessica, Jonathan Intravia, Kevin T. Wolff, and Michael T. Baglivio. “What Can Help? Examining Levels of Substance (Non)use as a Protective Factor in the Effect of ACEs on Crime.” Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 17(1), 42-61. 2018 Wolff, Kevin T., Celina Cuevas*, Jonathan Intravia, Michael Baglivio, and Nathan Epps. “The Effects of Neighborhood Context on Exposure to Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE) Among Adolescents Involved in the Juvenile Justice System: Latent Classes and Contextual Effects.” Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 47(11), 2279- 2300. Intravia, Jonathan, Benjamin R. Gibbs, Kevin T. Wolff, Rocio Paez, Allison Bernheimer*, and Alex R. Piquero. “The Mediating Role of Street Code Attitudes on the Self- Control and Crime Relationship.” Deviant Behavior, 39(10), 1305-1321. Wolff, Kevin T., Jonathan Intravia, Michael T. Baglivio, and Alex R. Piquero. “The Protective Impact of Immigrant Concentration on Juvenile Recidivism: A Multilevel Examination of Potential Mechanisms.” Crime & Delinquency, 64(10), 1271- 1305. Intravia, Jonathan, Alex R. Piquero, and Nicole Leeper Piquero. “The Racial Divide Surrounding United States of America National Anthem Protests in the National Football League.” Deviant Behavior, 39(8), 1058-1068. ^Featured in The Times of Northwest Indiana (2017): “Anthem Study by NFL not Suprising” by Al Hamnik. ^Featured in ChicagoNow (2017): “Colin Kaepernick Ideals, Stances are More Popular than You Think” by Paul M. Banks. Intravia, Jonathan, Kevin T. Wolff, and Alex R. Piquero. “Investigating the Effects of Media Consumption on Attitudes toward Police Legitimacy.” Deviant Behavior, 39(8), 963-980. 2017 Intravia, Jonathan, Kevin T. Wolff, Rocio Paez, and Benjamin R. Gibbs. “Investigating the Relationship between Social Media Consumption and Fear of Crime: A Partial Analysis of Mostly Young Adults.” Computers in Human Behavior, 77, 158-168. ^Featured in The St. Paul Pioneer Press (2018): “St. Paul Police-Scanner Facebook Group Aims for Safety – but is it changing Crime Perceptions?” by Mara H. Gottfried. ^Featured in Pacific Standard (2017): “Social Media Use is Linked to a Fear of Crime” by Tom Jacobs. Intravia, Jonathan, Emily Pelletier*, Kevin T. Wolff, and Michael T. Baglivio. “Community Disadvantage, Prosocial Bonds, and Juvenile Reoffending: A Multilevel Mediation Analysis.” Youth Violence and Juvenile Justice, 15(3), 240-263. Intravia 3 Intravia, Jonathan, Kevin T. Wolff, Benjamin R. Gibbs, and Alex R. Piquero. “Violent Attitudes and Antisocial Behavior: Examining the Code of the Street’s Generaliziability among a College Sample.” Deviant Behavior, 38(9), 989-1006. Wolff, Kevin T., Michael T. Baglivio, Jonathan Intravia, Mark Greenwald, and Nathan Epps. “The Mobility of Youth in the Justice System: Implications for Recidivism.” Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 46(7), 1371-1393. 2016 Berg, Mark, Eric A. Stewart, Jonathan Intravia, Patricia Y. Warren, and Ronald Simons. “Cynical Streets: Neighborhood Social Processes and Perceptions of Criminal Injustice.” Criminology, 54(3), 520-547. Intravia, Jonathan, Eric A. Stewart, Patricia Y. Warren, and Kevin T. Wolff. “Neighborhood Disorder and Generalized Trust: A Multilevel Mediation Examination of Social Mechanisms.” Journal of Criminal Justice, 46, 148-158. 2015 Wolff, Kevin T., Michael T. Baglivio, Jonathan Intravia, and Alex R. Piquero. “The Protective Impact of Immigrant Concentration on Juvenile Recidivism: A Statewide Analysis of Youth Offenders.” Journal of Criminal Justice, 43(6), 522-531. 2014 Intravia, Jonathan, Kevin T. Wolff, Eric A. Stewart, and Ronald L. Simons. “Neighborhood-Level Differences in Police Discrimination and Subcultural Violence: A Multilevel Examination of Adopting the Code of the Street.” Journal of Crime and Justice, 37(1), 42-60. ^Reprinted (book chapter): 2015. In Terrance Taylor (Ed.), Youth Violence Prevention. New York, NY: Routledge. 2012 Intravia, Jonathan, Shayne Jones, and Alex R. Piquero. “The Roles of Social Bonds, Personality, and Perceived Costs: An Empirical Investigation into Hirschi’s New Control Theory.” International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology, 56(8), 1182-1200. Piquero, Alex., Jonathan Intravia, Eric Stewart, Nicole Piquero, Marc Gertz, and Jake Bratton. “Investigating the Determinants of the Street Code and Its Relation to Offending Among Adults.” American Journal of Criminal Justice, 37(1), 19-32. Book Chapters & Encyclopedia Entries Forth. Intravia, Jonathan. “The Code of the Street: Causes and Consequences.” Routledge Handbook on Street Culture, editor Jeffrey Ian Ross. New York: Routledge. 2019 Wolff, Kevin T., and Jonathan Intravia. “Broken Windows/Zero-Tolerance Policing.” The Wiley Blackwell Encyclopedia of Urban and Regional Studies, editor: Anthony M. Orum. John Wiley & Sons. Intravia 4 Op-Eds & Other Publications 2017 Piquero, Alex R., Nicole Leeper Piquero, and Jonathan Intravia. “Opinions about NFL Anthem Protests are Divided Down Racial Lines.” The Dallas Morning News. November 13, 2017. ^Reprinted in El Paso Times, Waco Tribune-Herald, The Huffington Post, Gilmer Mirror, Science Newsline, The Monitor, Sporting News, MSN, Yahoo!, KERA News. Manuscripts Under Review Lytle, Daniel, Jonathan Intravia, and Ryan Randa. “An Understudied Population? Exploring the Factors Associated with Fear of Crime in a Semi-Rural Environment.” Roche, Sean P., Justin T. Pickett, Jonathan Intravia, and Andrew J. Thompson. “On the Measurement of Subjective Apprehension Risk.” Intravia, Jonathan, Alex R. Piquero, Anthony G. Vito, Chelsey Narvey, and Nicole Leeper Piquero. “Crying Foul: Assessing Public Sentiment Over Student-Athlete Compensatory Stipulations.” Teaching Experience Courses taught – Ball State University Advanced Criminology (undergraduate) Introduction to Criminal Justice (undergraduate) Introduction to Criminology (undergraduate) Introduction to Policing (undergraduate) Juvenile Justice and Delinquency (undergraduate) Philosophical Aspects of Criminal Justice and Criminology (graduate) Research Methods in Criminal
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