Free 04 Translational Criminology Magazine Vol 16-2019 to Vol. 1

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Free 04 Translational Criminology Magazine Vol 16-2019 to Vol. 1 TRANSLATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY is the magazine of the Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy and is published twice a year. TC Magazine seeks to advance the overall goal of the CEBCP by illustrating examples of how research is converted into criminal justice practice. It is published twice each year. Editor: Cynthia Lum Winter 2019 (Special Issue 16x) ▪ Translating Research to Policy: Improving Justice for Women and Girls. BY SHEETAL RANJAN AND AMANDA BURGESS-PROCTOR. ▪ Investing in Data to Inform Issues of Justice for Women and Girls. BY LYNN ADDINGTON. ▪ Data-Driven Recommendations Regarding Campus Sexual Misconduct. BY TARA RICHARDS. ▪ Combatting the Cybersexual Victimization of Girls and Women. BY JORDAN NAVARRO AND SHELLY CLEVENGER. ▪ Gender-Based Violence in Central America and Women Asylum Seekers in the United States. BY CECILIA MENJÍVAR AND SHANNON DRYSDALE WALSH. ▪ Testing Sexual Assault Kits Saves Money and Prevents Future Sexual Assaults. BY RACHEL LOVELL, LIUHONG YANG, AND JOANNA KLINGENSTEIN. ▪ Women in the Correctional System. BY JENNIFER COBBINA. ▪ Increasing Female Participation in Policing through Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships. BY ANNE LI KRINGEN. ▪ Women, Peace, and Security Act: Implications for Women in Law Enforcement. BY CARA RABE-HEMP. ▪ Connecting the Dots: Improving Justice for Women and Girls. BY SHEETAL RANJAN AND JOCELYN FONTAINE. Fall 2018 (Issue 15) ▪ Policy Responses to a High Profile School Tragedy. BY ANTHONY PETROSINO, ASHLEY BOAL, AND AUGUSTUS MAYS. ▪ Washington/Baltimore High Intensity Drug Trafficking Areas Program Joins George Mason University’s Center for Evidence-Based Crime Policy. BY TOM CARR AND CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ A Primer on Criminal Justice Risk Assessments. BY RICHARD BERK. ▪ Utilizing Data and Science to Reduce Serious Injury and Fatality Crashes on Rural Roadways. BY KEN CLARY. ▪ 50 Years Later: The Kerner Commission Legacy. BY LAURIE ROBINSON. ▪ Marking the 50th Anniversary of President Johnson’s Crime Commission. BY TED GEST. ▪ The Distinguished Achievement Award in Evidence-Based Crime Policy 2018 Recipients. JAMES BUEERMANN AND EDMUND MCGARRELL. ▪ 2018 Evidence-Based Policing Hall of Fame Inductees. JEFFERY EGGE AND MICHAEL NEWMAN. ▪ Translating Science in Film: The Science & Entertainment Exchange of the National Academy of Sciences. BY ANN MERCHANT AND ANA SALCEDA. ▪ Proactive Policing’s Effects on Crime and Communities. BY DAVID WEISBURD AND MALAY MAJMUNDAR. ▪ BetaGov Supports Practitioners and Evaluators in Conducting Randomized Control Trials to Test Criminal Justice Programs. BY JUSTIN ESCAMILLA, JESSICA REICHERT, MAUREEN HILLHOUSE, AND ANGELA HAWKEN. Spring 2018 (Issue 14) ▪ The Matrix Demonstration Projects: An Update. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. ▪ From Research to Practice, Two Decades Later: Evidence-Based Policing in Madison, Wisconsin. BY CORY NELSON. ▪ Evidence that Gun Laws Can Reduce Intimate Partner Homicides. BY APRIL M. ZEOLI, ALEXANDER MCCOURT, SHANI BUGGS, SHANNON FRATTAROLI, AND DANIEL W. WEBSTER. ▪ What Role Should Criminologists Play in Criminal Justice Debates? A Push for Public Criminology with a Cautionary Note. BY JOHN A. SHJARBACK. ▪ RESEARCH NOTES FROM THE FIELD, FOR THE FIELD: P-What? A Practitioner Guide to Understanding P-Values.BY JEREMIAH P. JOHNSON. ▪ Collaborative Efforts to Address and Prevent Fatal Traffic Crashes. BY TRACY J. ANDERSON, DANIEL J. FINDLEY, TRAVIS E. BAITY, JOSEPH L. GASKINS, GREG FERRARA, MATTHEW KULIANI, AND PAUL FOLEY. ▪ Using Data to Inform Pretrial Supervision: Strategies from Allegheny County, Pennsylvania. BY JANICE RADOVICK DEAN AND KATHRYN COLLINS. ▪ EVALUATION NOTE: The Importance of Statistical Power in Social and Behavioral Sciences. BY NILOOFAR RAMEZANI. ▪ IN MEMORIAM: Jeffrey A. Roth (1945-2017). BY CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. Fall 2017 (Issue 13) ▪ The Proactive Policing Lab. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER. ▪ LEADS Agencies Canada: A New Program to Fix an Old Problem. BY LAURA HUEY. ▪ Beyond the City Limits: Evaluating Court Reforms in Rural and Small-Town Courts. BY ALISSA POLLITZ WORDEN, REVEKA V. SHTEYNBERG, KIRSTIN A. MORGAN, AND ANDREW L.B. DAVIES. ▪ Combating the Opioid Crisis with Treatment Not Arrest: An Examination of an Emerging Police Model. BY JESSICA REICHERT. ▪ SPECIAL FEATURE: The Distinguished Achievement Award in Evidence-Based Crime Policy 2017 Recipients.FEATURING DORIS L. MACKENZIE AND JAMES K. STEWART. ▪ The Misdemeanor Justice Project: Using Data to Guide Criminal Justice Reform. BY JEREMY TRAVIS, PREETI CHAUHAN, AND MEREDITH PATTEN, WITH MICHAEL C. GREEN. ▪ SPECIAL FEATURE: The 2017 Evidence-Based Policing Hall of Fame Inductees. ▪ Trust and Legitimacy Built through Structured, Fair, and Objective Decision Making. BY MICHAEL GROPMAN AND GINA VINCENT. Spring 2017 (Issue 12) ▪ Integrating Research and Researchers into the U.S. Marshals Service. BY DAVID BIERIE AND PAUL DETAR. ▪ New Partnership Uses Research and Data to Improve Understanding of Officer- Involved Shootings. BY JIM BURCH AND BREANNE CAVE. ▪ The Caruth Police Institute: A Model of Embedded Criminology. BY MELINDA D. SCHLAGER AND ROBERT C. DAVIS. ▪ Moving Toward a Research-Based Framework for School Policing. BY JOSEPH M. MCKENNA AND KATHY E. MARTINEZ-PRATHER. ▪ Adding More Police Is Unlikely to Reduce Crime: A Meta-Analysis of Police Agency Size and Crime Research. BY JOHN E. ECK, YONGJEI LEE, AND NICHOLAS CORSARO. ▪ The Role of Consultants in the Applied Research Process. BY JOHN KAPINOS. ▪ Problem-Oriented Policing as a Form of Translational Criminology. BY SUZANNE COBLE AND MICHAEL S. SCOTT. ▪ NIJ’s LEADS Programs. BY GARY CORDNER, GEOFFREY ALPERT, AND MAUREEN MCGOUGH. ▪ Police Research on the Front Lines. BY JASON POTTS. ▪ Research Note: Gaining Access to Security Environments in Norway. BY MARTIN NØKLEBERG. Fall 2016 (Issue 11) ▪ When is Innovation Not Enough? The Importance of Organizational Context in Community Policing. BY CHARLOTTE GILL, DAVID WEISBURD, ZOE VITTER, CLAUDIA GROSS SHADER, TARI NELSON-ZAGAR, AND LINDA SPAIN. ▪ Improving the Practice of Stop and Search in Scotland. BY MEGAN O’NEILL AND ELIZABETH ASTON. ▪ Evidence-Based Youth Mentoring Systems: Constructing Models to Address Systemic Issues Communities Face.BY TARRICK MCGUIRE AND CARLIN CALIMAN. ▪ Training New Scholars to Advance Policing Research and Knowledge Translation. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND NICHOLAS FYFE. ▪ Glasgow’s Community Initiative to Reduce Violence-An Example of International Criminal Justice Policy Transfer Between the US and UK. BY WILLIAM GRAHAM. ▪ Insight Policing-Investigating the Conflict Behavior in Criminal Behavior. BY MEGAN PRICE AND LATRIVIETTE YOUNG. Spring 2016 (Issue 10) ▪ Looking Back and Forward: The Matrix and Its Demonstration Projects. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER ▪ Community Building in Hot Spots: Seattle Neighborhood Group’s Non-Police-Led Crime Prevention Approach. BY CODY W. TELEP, TARI NELSON-ZAGAR, AND JULIE HIBDON ▪ Providing Services in a Rapid Scale-Up Context: The Importance of Research Partnerships. BY SARAH KUCK JALBERT, HOLLY SWAN, AND DANA HUNT ▪ What Research is Needed to Help Family Survivors of Homicide? BY DAN LEVEY, TREVOR FRONIUS, SARAH GUCKENBURG, AND ANTHONY PETROSINO ▪ Collective Action for Trade Transparency against Financial Crime. BY NIKOS PASSAS ▪ Exploring the Evidence-Based Policy Landscape in Community Corrections: Results from a Statewide Agency Survey. BY JORDAN M. HYATT AND CHADWICK J. LIBBY ▪ Examining the Success of an Embedded Criminologist Partnership. BY NICOLE FRISCH Fall 2015 (Issue 9) ▪ Reinventing American Policing: A Seven-Point Blueprint for the 21st Century. BY CYNTHIA LUM AND DANIEL NAGIN. ▪ Using Social Network Analysis to Guide Law Enforcement Strategies. BY ANDREW M. FOX, KENNETH J. NOVAK, AND JOSEPH MCHALE. ▪ Time to Rethink the Age of Adult Court Jurisdiction. BY VINCENT SCHIRALDI AND BRUCE WESTERN. ▪ Promoting Evidence-Based Crime Prevention Policies in Latin America and the Caribbean. BY LAURA JAITMAN AND ROBERTO GUERRERO COMPEÁN. ▪ Improving Academic-Police Partnerships: Observations and Suggestions from a Long-Term Partnership in Portland, Oregon. BY KRIS HENNING AND GREG STEWART. ▪ School Safety Research: Where Do We Go From Here? BY WILLIAM MODZELESKI, CHARLOTTE GILL, AND ANTHONY PETROSINO. Spring 2015 (Issue 8) ▪ The Evolution toward Integrating Science and Evidence in U.S. Department of Justice Agencies—An Insider’s Reflections. BY JAMES H. BURCH II. ▪ Body-Worn Cameras—Rapid Adoption in a Low-Information Environment? BY CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ Summer Jobs and Youth Violence. BY SARA B. HELLER. ▪ Knowledge Transfer in Action: Crime Reduction through a Regulatory Approach. BY JAMES ROYAN AND JOHN E. ECK. ▪ Evidence-Based Policing, “What Works” and Stratified Policing, “How to Make It Work”. BY ROBERTO SANTOS AND RACHEL SANTOS. ▪ Understanding Citizen Support for License Plate Readers. BY LINDA M. MEROLA AND CYNTHIA LUM. ▪ Fulbright@CEBCP: Richard Adams. BY RICHARD ADAMS. Fall 2014 (Issue 7) ▪ Modeling Successful Researcher-Practitioner Partnerships: The International Association of Chiefs of Police Research Advisory Committee. BY ED DAVIS AND LAURIE ROBINSON. ▪ The St. Louis Public Safety Partnership. BY RICHARD ROSENFELD. ▪ Realizing the Potential of Technology for Policing. BY CHRISTOPHER S. KOPER, CYNTHIA LUM, AND JAMES J. WILLIS. ▪ Integrating Evidence to Stop Shootings: New York’s GIVE (Gun-Involved Violence Elimination) Initiative. BY THOMAS P. ABT. ▪ Looking Forward, Looking Back: Reflections on the Value of Evidence-Based Practices in Policing.
Recommended publications
  • In Defence of Administrative Criminology Pat Mayhew*
    Mayhew Crime Sci (2016) 5:7 DOI 10.1186/s40163-016-0055-8 THEORETICAL ARTICLE Open Access In defence of administrative criminology Pat Mayhew* Abstract Background: This paper is based on an address given as joint winner with Ronald V. Clarke of the 2015 Stockholm Prize in Criminology. This was awarded for some early studies we worked on together in the UK Home Office which were seen as important in re-focusing the task of preventing crime towards simply reducing opportunities for it. This approach became known as situational crime prevention. It had a hostile academic reception from academic crimi- nologists and earned the label of ‘administrative criminology’. Later, the same label was given to what was portrayed as narrow, unscholarly research done for government to serve their political agenda, in contrast to research with more range and theoretical thrust. Administrative criminology is a term most familiar in relation to UK research supported by its government; this is the paper’s context. Discussion: Administrative criminology deserves a much more positive appraisal than it has been given to date. First, government research activity through to the 1990s at least was self-generated (not imposed), was influential, and was often controversial. The research establishing situational crime prevention as a generally effective approach has with- stood criticism that it lacks intellectual weight and would not work. Second, administrative criminologists have been consistently brought to heel as regards ensuring that they communicate what they know effectively and clearly. Third, administrative criminology has arguably had more influence on policy than academic criminology, since its business is to address the concerns of government to which it is better placed to make its voice heard.
    [Show full text]
  • List of Entries
    List of Entries 1%ers 1 Associations 100 ABM 1 Auto Theft 100 Accomplice Crime 1 Automated 100 Actualizing Risk-Need-Responsivity 1 Automated and Manual Forensic Adaptation 12 Examinations 100 Administrative Criminology 12 Babies Behind Bars 109 Admissibility 12 Bayesian Learning 116 Adolescence-Limited Offending 12 Bayesian Updating and Crime 116 Adolescent Contexts 12 BCS 125 Affordable Care Act 12 Behavioral Health Courts 125 Age-Crime Curve 12 Behavioral Investigative Advice 125 Agent-Based Assessments of Criminological Behavioral Learning 134 Theory 19 Behavioral Linkage Analysis 134 Agent-Based Modeling for Understanding Behavioral Management in Probation 134 Patterns of Crime 32 Behavioral Science Evidence in Criminal Agent-Based Modelling 41 Trials 145 Agent-Based Models to Predict Crime at Bias Crime 154 Places 41 Bias in Forensic Science 154 Aging Correctional Populations 48 Bias/Hate Motivated Crime 154 Aging Prison Population: Factors to Biased Policing 154 Consider 60 Bicycle Theft 162 AIDS 67 Biker Clubs/Gangs 170 Alcohol Dependence 67 Biological Geographical Profiling 171 Alternative Courts 67 Biometrics 179 Alternatives to Pre-trial Detention 68 Biometrics and Border Control Policing 179 American Dream 75 Boot Camps 188 AML 75 Border Control 188 Analytical Criminology 75 Brain 188 Anomie 75 Breakdown 188 Anomie and Crime 76 Break-In 188 Anomie Theory (Strain Theory) 86 Breaking and Entering 188 Antisocial Personality Disorder 86 Bribery 188 Antisocial Potential 86 British Crime Firms 188 Anxieties About Crime 86 British Crime Survey 194 Applied Geographical Profiling 86 British Police 203 Arms Races 100 Broken Windows Thesis 213 G. Bruinsma, D. Weisburd (eds.), Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice, 5599 DOI 10.
    [Show full text]
  • The Future of Penal Reform, the Carceral State, and American Politics*
    Bring It On: The Future of Penal Reform, the Carceral State, and American Politics* Marie Gottschalk** Fifteen years ago, mass imprisonment was largely an invisible issue in the United States. Since then, criticism of the country’s extraordinary incarceration rate has become widespread across the political spectrum. The huge prison buildup of the past four decades has few ardent defenders at present. But reforms to reduce the number of people in jail and prison have been remarkably modest so far. Meanwhile, a tenacious carceral state has sprouted in the shadows of mass imprisonment and has been extending its reach far beyond the prison gate. It includes not only the country’s vast archipelago of jails and prisons, but also the far-reaching and growing range of penal punishments and controls that lie in the never-never land between the prison gate and full citizenship. As it sunders families and communities, and radically reworks conceptions of democracy, rights, and citizenship, the carceral state poses a formidable political and social challenge. The reach of the carceral state today is truly breathtaking. It extends well beyond the estimated 2.2 million people sitting in jail or prison today in the United States.1 It encompasses the more than 8 million people—or 1 in 23 adults―who are under some form of state control: including jail, prison, probation, parole, community sanctions, drug courts, immigrant detention, and other forms of government supervision.2 It also includes the millions of people who are booked into jail each year— nearly twelve million—and the estimated 7.5 percent of all adults who are felons or ex-felons.3 * This article is based on a revised and updated version of the concluding chapter of Marie Gottschalk, Caught: The Prison State and the Lockdown of American Politics (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2015).
    [Show full text]
  • Towards a Global Criminology?
    Edinburgh Research Explorer Towards a Global Criminology Citation for published version: Jones, R 2011, 'Towards a Global Criminology'. <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1988359> Link: Link to publication record in Edinburgh Research Explorer Document Version: Peer reviewed version Publisher Rights Statement: © Jones, R. (2011). Towards a Global Criminology. General rights Copyright for the publications made accessible via the Edinburgh Research Explorer is retained by the author(s) and / or other copyright owners and it is a condition of accessing these publications that users recognise and abide by the legal requirements associated with these rights. Take down policy The University of Edinburgh has made every reasonable effort to ensure that Edinburgh Research Explorer content complies with UK legislation. If you believe that the public display of this file breaches copyright please contact [email protected] providing details, and we will remove access to the work immediately and investigate your claim. Download date: 01. Oct. 2021 University of Edinburgh School of Law Research Paper Series No 2012/05 Towards a Global Criminology? Richard Jones Lecturer in Criminology University of Edinburgh, School of Law [email protected] This text may be downloaded for personal research purposes only. Any additional reproduction for other purposes, whether in hard copy or electronically, requires the consent of the author(s). If cited or quoted, reference should be made to the name(s) of the author(s), the title, the number, and the working paper series © 2012 Richard Jones Edinburgh School of Law Research Paper Series University of Edinburgh Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1988359 Abstract The aim of this article is consider the current constitution, and likely future prospects, of the field of criminology, and to examine in particular how it might be becoming more global in nature.
    [Show full text]
  • Use of Research Evidence by Criminal Justice Professionals
    Johnson et al. Justice Policy Journal, Fall, 2018 Use of Research Evidence by Criminal Justice Professionals Lee Michael Johnson,1 Paul Elam,2 Susan M. Lebold,3 Robert Burroughs4 Justice Policy Journal Volume 16, Number 2 (Fall, 2018) © Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice 2018 www.cjcj.org/jpj Abstract This essay reviews and critiques the current state of use of research evidence in policymaking and practice by criminal justice professionals. It focuses on the direct use of research by criminal justice administrators and practitioners in the field. While some policies and practices are mandated by laws or funding sources, field professionals have much discretion in determining the policies, programs, and practices of their agencies or organizations. Thus, understanding how they acquire, view, and use (or not use) research evidence is essential for improving evidence- based policymaking and practice and collaboration with academicians. The authors review and analyze research and other literature to 1) explain the existence and persistence of a research-practice gap in criminal justice 2) recommend strategies for increasing the use of research evidence in decision-making and 3) suggest future research needed to understand and promote use of research by criminal justice professionals. 1 William Paterson University 2 Michigan Public Health Institute 3 Wayne State University 4 Public Policy Associates, Inc. Corresponding Author: Lee Michael Johnson, [email protected] Use of Research Evidence by Criminal Justice Professionals 1 Introduction This paper examines the problem of research evidence under-utilization in criminal justice policy and practice. Research evidence is very important to the development of criminal justice decision-making.
    [Show full text]
  • Progressive Criminology, Grassroots Organizations, and Social Justice Tim Goddard
    Old Dominion University ODU Digital Commons Sociology & Criminal Justice Faculty Publications Sociology & Criminal Justice 2015 Potential Partnerships: Progressive Criminology, Grassroots Organizations, and Social Justice Tim Goddard Randolph R. Myers Old Dominion University, [email protected] Kaitlyn J. Robinson Old Dominion University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/ sociology_criminaljustice_fac_pubs Part of the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons, and the Sociology Commons Repository Citation Goddard, Tim; Myers, Randolph R.; and Robinson, Kaitlyn J., "Potential Partnerships: Progressive Criminology, Grassroots Organizations, and Social Justice" (2015). Sociology & Criminal Justice Faculty Publications. 18. https://digitalcommons.odu.edu/sociology_criminaljustice_fac_pubs/18 Original Publication Citation Goddard, T., Myers, R.R., & Robison, K.J. (2015). Potential partnerships: Progressive criminology, grassroots organizations and social justice. International Journal for Crime Justice and Social Democracy, 4(4), 76-90. doi: 10.5204/ijcjsd.v3i2.231 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Sociology & Criminal Justice at ODU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Sociology & Criminal Justice Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of ODU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. www.crimejusticejournal.com IJCJ&SD 2015 4(4): 76‐90 ISSN 2202–8005 Potential Partnerships: Progressive Criminology, Grassroots Organizations and Social Justice Tim Goddard Florida International University, USA Randolph R Myers Old Dominion University, USA Kaitlyn J Robison Old Dominion University, USA Abstract Criminologists around the globe are writing about the disproportionate criminalization of minority groups and – in the US in particular – about racial disproportionality in all aspects of the criminal justice system.
    [Show full text]
  • Criminology: a Realist Analysis Matthews, Roger A
    www.ssoar.info The construction of ‘So What?’ Criminology: a realist analysis Matthews, Roger A. Postprint / Postprint Zeitschriftenartikel / journal article Zur Verfügung gestellt in Kooperation mit / provided in cooperation with: www.peerproject.eu Empfohlene Zitierung / Suggested Citation: Matthews, R. A. (2010). The construction of ‘So What?’ Criminology: a realist analysis. Crime, Law and Social Change, 54(2), 125-140. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10611-010-9249-2 Nutzungsbedingungen: Terms of use: Dieser Text wird unter dem "PEER Licence Agreement zur This document is made available under the "PEER Licence Verfügung" gestellt. Nähere Auskünfte zum PEER-Projekt finden Agreement ". For more Information regarding the PEER-project Sie hier: http://www.peerproject.eu Gewährt wird ein nicht see: http://www.peerproject.eu This document is solely intended exklusives, nicht übertragbares, persönliches und beschränktes for your personal, non-commercial use.All of the copies of Recht auf Nutzung dieses Dokuments. Dieses Dokument this documents must retain all copyright information and other ist ausschließlich für den persönlichen, nicht-kommerziellen information regarding legal protection. You are not allowed to alter Gebrauch bestimmt. Auf sämtlichen Kopien dieses Dokuments this document in any way, to copy it for public or commercial müssen alle Urheberrechtshinweise und sonstigen Hinweise purposes, to exhibit the document in public, to perform, distribute auf gesetzlichen Schutz beibehalten werden. Sie dürfen dieses or otherwise use the document in public. Dokument nicht in irgendeiner Weise abändern, noch dürfen By using this particular document, you accept the above-stated Sie dieses Dokument für öffentliche oder kommerzielle Zwecke conditions of use. vervielfältigen, öffentlich ausstellen, aufführen, vertreiben oder anderweitig nutzen.
    [Show full text]
  • One More for the Books: a Program Review of Delinquent Rehabilitation
    riminolog C y: d O n p Glassner and Carey, Social Crimonol 2017, 5:1 a e y n g A DOI: 10.4172/2375-4435.1000164 o c l c o i e c s o s Sociology and Criminology-Open Access S ISSN: 2375-4435 Research Article Article Open Access One More for the Books: A Program Review of Delinquent Rehabilitation Glassner SD1* and Carey MT2 1Department of Criminal Justice and Sociology, College of Letters and Sciences, Columbus State University, Columbus, Georgia 2School of Criminal Justice, Texas State University, 601 University Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666 Abstract The current study analyzes the effectiveness of a treatment program aimed at reducing juvenile recidivism by offering various pro-social services. Results from this non-theoretical evaluation are consistent with the theoretically derived “risk” and “needs” principles. Findings from various logistic regression models showed that high-risk juveniles (parolees) exposed to the treatment demonstrated significantly lower levels of recidivism than did low-risk juveniles (probationers). Practical and real-world guidelines for future rehabilitative program evaluations are discussed so as to inform future research. Additionally, pragmatic policy implications concerning juvenile rehabilitation are described. Keywords: Delinquency; Rehabilitation; Program evaluation; encouraged the notion that “nothing works” in rehabilitative Treatment; Policy programming [20]. Following Martinson, hundreds of programs have been designed and implemented which demonstrate otherwise One More for the Books: A Program Review of [12,21,22]. Extensive research directed towards delinquent Delinquent Rehabilitation rehabilitation has been conducted over the years as indicated by the various meta-analyses that have reviewed the literature on the matter Proper intervention for delinquents is important because early [10,12,17,18,22-24].
    [Show full text]
  • Theoretical Criminology
    Theoretical Criminology http://tcr.sagepub.com/ For penal moderation: Notes towards a public philosophy of punishment Ian Loader Theoretical Criminology 2010 14: 349 DOI: 10.1177/1362480610370166 The online version of this article can be found at: http://tcr.sagepub.com/content/14/3/349 Published by: http://www.sagepublications.com Additional services and information for Theoretical Criminology can be found at: Email Alerts: http://tcr.sagepub.com/cgi/alerts Subscriptions: http://tcr.sagepub.com/subscriptions Reprints: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsReprints.nav Permissions: http://www.sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav Citations: http://tcr.sagepub.com/content/14/3/349.refs.html >> Version of Record - Aug 3, 2010 What is This? Downloaded from tcr.sagepub.com at SAGE Publications on May 20, 2014 Theoretical Criminology © The Author(s), 2010 Reprints and Permissions: http://www.sagepub.co.uk/ journalsPermissions.nav Vol. 14(3): 349–367; 1362–4806 DOI: 10.1177/1362480610370166 For penal moderation Notes towards a public philosophy of punishment IANLOADER University of Oxford, UK Abstract The 2008 financial crash, and the lessons it teaches us about the costs of unregulated excess, offers an opportunity to think anew about, and seek to temper, the enthusiasm for excessive punishment that has swept across several western societies in recent years. Taking this as my point of departure, I make the case in this article for a public philosophy of punishment that can speak to the times we now inhabit—what I call penal moderation. I begin by describing the value and role of a public philosophy of punishment and setting out the constitutive elements of penal moderation as a candidate for such a philosophy.
    [Show full text]
  • Michelle S. Brown
    Curriculum Vitae MICHELLE BROWN CONTACT INFORMATION Department of Sociology University of Tennessee 901 McClung Tower Knoxville, Tennessee 37996-0490 Phone: 865 974 6021 Email: [email protected] POSITIONS and AFFILIATIONS Professor, University of Tennessee, Department of Sociology (2018-Present) Associate Professor, University of Tennessee, Department of Sociology (2013-2018) Affiliate Faculty, Community of Scholars: Illuminate Digital Scholars (2017-Present); Community of Scholars on Intersectionality, UT (2015-Present); Disasters, Displacement, and Human Rights Program, UT (2015-Present); Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program, UT (2015-Present); American Studies Program, UT (2012-2016); Global Studies Program, UT (2012-2019) Law & Culture Division Head/Fellow, UT, Center for the Study of Social Justice (2012-Present) Assistant Professor, University of Tennessee, Department of Sociology (2011-2013) Visiting Fellow, Indiana University, Poynter Center for the Study of Ethics/American Institutions (2010-11) Associate Professor (with tenure), Ohio University, Department of Sociology and Anthropology (2009 – 2011) Assistant Professor, Ohio University, Department of Sociology and Anthropology (2003 – 2009) Founding Director, Center for Law, Justice & Culture, Ohio University (2009-2011) EDUCATION Combined Ph.D. in Criminal Justice and American Studies May 2003, Indiana University, Bloomington M.A. Criminal Justice August 1997, Indiana University, Bloomington B.A. Comparative Literature (Film Studies) May 1993, Indiana University, Bloomington
    [Show full text]
  • Is Downsizing Prisons Dangerous? the Effect of California’S Realignment Act on Public Safety
    Portland State University PDXScholar Criminology and Criminal Justice Faculty Publications and Presentations Criminology and Criminal Justice 2015 Is Downsizing Prisons Dangerous? The Effect of California’s Realignment Act on Public Safety Jody Sundt Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Emily Salisbury University of Nevada, Las Vegas Mark G. Harmon Portland State University Follow this and additional works at: https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/ccj_fac Part of the Criminology Commons Let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Citation Details Sundt, Jody; Salisbury, Emily; and Harmon, Mark G., "Is Downsizing Prisons Dangerous? The Effect of California’s Realignment Act on Public Safety" (2015). Criminology and Criminal Justice Faculty Publications and Presentations. 17. https://pdxscholar.library.pdx.edu/ccj_fac/17 This Post-Print is brought to you for free and open access. It has been accepted for inclusion in Criminology and Criminal Justice Faculty Publications and Presentations by an authorized administrator of PDXScholar. Please contact us if we can make this document more accessible: [email protected]. Is Downsizing Prisons Dangerous? The Effect of California’s Realignment Act on Public Safety Jody Sundt Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis Emily J Salisbury University of Nevada, Las Vegas Mark G. Harmon Portland State University Forthcoming 2016 Criminology and Public Policy Vol. 15, issue 2 A version of this paper was presented at the annual meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Nov.
    [Show full text]
  • Reducing Violence Without Police: a Review of Research Evidence
    Reducing Violence Without Police: A Review of Research Evidence November 2020 Reducing Violence Without Police: A Review of Research Evidence Submitted to Arnold Ventures by the John Jay College Research Advisory Group on Preventing and Reducing Community Violence RESEARCH AND JOHN JAY COLLEGE OF CRIMINALEVALUATION JUSTICE / CITY UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK CENTER RESEARCH AND EVALUATION CENTER PAGE 1 Reducing Violence Without Police: A Review of Research Evidence Reducing Violence Without Police: A Review of Research Evidence November 2020 Submitted to Arnold Ventures by the John Jay College Research Advisory Group on Preventing and Reducing Community Violence Members of the John Jay College Research Advisory Group on Preventing and Reducing Community Violence Charles Branas Erin M. Kerrison Alex R. Piquero Mailman School of Public Health School of Social Welfare Department of Sociology Columbia University University of California, Berkeley University of Miami Shani Buggs Tracey Meares Joseph Richardson, Jr. Violence Prevention Research Program School of Law Department of African American Studies University of California Davis Yale University University of Maryland Andrew V. Papachristos Jeffrey A. Butts Caterina Gouvis Roman Department Sociology John Jay College of Criminal Justice Department of Criminal Justice and Institute for Policy Research City University of New York Temple University Northwestern University Anna Harvey John Pfaff Daniel Webster Department of Politics School of Law Bloomberg School of Public Health and Public Safety
    [Show full text]