Program PDF - The American Society of Criminology

Transcription

Program PDF - The American Society of Criminology
68th Annual Meeting
69th Annual Meeting
Atlanta, GA
November 20th – 23rd, 2013
Atlanta Marriott Marquis
Thinking About Context:
Challenges for Crime and Justice
2012 Program
November 14th – 17th, 2012 • Chicago, IL
Theme:
Expanding the Core: Neglected Crimes,
Groups, Causes and Policy Approaches
Timothy Brezina, Georgia State University
Susan F. Sharp, University of Oklahoma
[email protected]
November 2012
Program Co-Chairs:
American
Society of
Criminology
THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY
68th ANNUAL MEETING
November 14-17, 2012
Palmer House Hilton
Chicago, Illinois
Thinking about Context: Challenges for Crime and Justice
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The American Society of Criminology
Greetings from the Program Chairs
2012 ASC Program Committee
General Meeting Information
2012 ASC Divisions
ASC Division Meetings and Events
ASC Divisions’ Sessions of Interest
Other Meetings and Events
Receptions
Directory of Exhibitors
ASC Presidents
Program Summary
Detailed Program Schedule
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
A Special Thank You
Advertising
Participant Index
Topic Index
Floor Plans
3
4
5
6
7
8
10
28
30
31
32
33
67
68
167
272
358
381
382
402
478
481
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THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY
1314 Kinnear Road, Suite 212, Columbus, OH 43212-1156
614-292-9207 (p) 614-292-6767 (f) [email protected] www.asc41.com
The American Society of Criminology embodies the following objectives:
1. To bring together, in one multidisciplinary society, persons actively engaged in research teaching, and/or practice in the
field of criminology.
2. To foster criminological scholarship, research, education, and training within academic institutions and within the divisions
of the criminal justice system, including public and private agencies concerned with crime, justice, and corrections.
3. To encourage scholarly, scientific, and practical exchange and cooperation among those engaged in criminology.
4. To serve as a forum for the dissemination of criminological knowledge.
The American Society of Criminology Officers and Staff, 2012-2013
President: Robert Sampson, Harvard University
President-Elect: Robert Agnew, Emory University
Vice President: Ross Matsueda, University of Washington-Seattle
Vice President-Elect: Carolyn Rebecca Block, Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority
Executive Director: Chris W. Eskridge, University of Nebraska
Treasurer: Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Past President: Steven Messener, University at Albany
Executive Counselors: Eric Baumer, Florida State University; Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY; Colin Loftin
University at Albany, SUNY; Nancy Rodriguez, Arizona State University; Susan Sharp, University of Oklahoma; Eric Stewart,
Florida State University; Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
Administrator: Susan Case
Webmaster: Anne Arendt
Bookkeeper: Nicole Coldiron
Criminology: An Interdisciplinary Journal
Editor: D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
Criminology & Public Policy Journal
Editor: Tom Blomberg, Florida State University
The Criminologist: Newsletter
Editor: Ross Matsueda, University of Washington
Membership
Applications for memberships in The American Society of Criminology may be obtained by writing to the administrative
offices in Columbus, Ohio, or logging on to our website at www.asc41.com. Membership runs from January 1st to December
31st of each year. Annual dues are $95.00 ($55.00 for full-time students) Membership in the Society includes subscriptions to
the journals, Criminology, Criminology & Public Policy, and the newsletter, The Criminologist.
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GREETINGS FROM THE PROGRAM CHAIRS
Pamela Wilcox and John Wooldredge, University of Cincinnati
It is with pleasure that we welcome you to the great city of Chicago and the 68th annual meeting of the American
Society of Criminology. It has been our honor to spearhead the organization of a conference that involves so many talented and
diverse participants – over 3000 from around the globe, representing a comprehensive range of institutional affiliations.
We trust that the extensive intellectual energy that defines ASC is reflected in the program. This year’s program is the
largest ever for our organization. There are over 800 sessions, beginning early Wednesday morning and continuing through
Saturday morning. Every day of the conference promises stimulating sessions that will fill rooms across seven floors of the
glorious Palmer House Hilton. Each day includes paper sessions, roundtables, and Author Meets Critics sessions as well as
numerous panels devoted to professional development. The poster session, which includes a wine-and-cheese reception, will be
held from 5:00 to 7:00 pm on Thursday in the Grand Ballroom.
The conference theme “Thinking about Context: Challenges for Crime and Justice”, aside from being an obvious
homage to the late James Q. Wilson, plays off our rapidly growing awareness of the relevance of “context” for topics well
beyond the traditional criminological applications to urban neighborhoods. In the realms of criminology and crime prevention,
there will be sessions focused on everything from situations and unique definitions of “neighborhood” to states and nations, with
even a few sessions incorporating a focus on gene/environment interactions. We have spread these sessions across the
conference in order to expose participants to a variety of criminological applications. There are also many sessions focused on
the relevance of context for justice issues involving police, courts, and corrections. Many sessions focusing on race and gender
issues also underscore the relevance of the conference theme, where scholars will discuss these issues within broader cultural as
well as more specific criminal justice contexts.
Emphases on the role of context will also play out in several of the Author Meets Critics sessions and in tributes to
some great scholars who have recognized the importance of context in their own work and paved the way for the myriad of
applications you will see this week. Without losing sight of where it all began, here in Chicago, the conference will also
recognize the accomplishments of the Chicago Area Project (CAP), founded by Clifford Shaw. CAP is the recipient of this
year’s Presidential Justice Award. As this year’s philanthropic focus of the ASC, please consider donating to one of several
community programs run by CAP (website links are located on the ASC homepage).
The program also includes two special plenary sessions, both taking place in the Grand Ballroom. The ASC Awards
Plenary, which includes the Sutherland Address by David Garland, will take place on Wednesday evening from 6:30-8:00 pm.
It will be followed by an opening reception, where we can mingle to the tunes of Ron Akers and His Bluegrass Band. The
Presidential Plenary will take place a bit earlier than it has in recent years. President Robert Sampson will deliver his address at
5:00 pm on Friday. His remarks will be followed by a President’s reception from 6:00-7:00pm, which is just the beginning of a
fun-filled evening. It will immediately be followed by a large number of departmental receptions from 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm.
The evening will conclude with the Minority Fellowship Dance in the Red Lacquer Room (the room is as cool as it sounds).
Here, party-goers will be entertained by two bands. A perennial favorite, Larry Sherman and the Hot Spots, will kick things off.
They will be followed on stage by amazing Chicago blues in the form of the Matthew Skoller Band. Please don’t miss this
night of fun (and fund-raising) with colleagues!
We sincerely hope you participate in a cross-section of everything the conference has to offer while also taking in some
of the Chicago area attractions noted in the latest issue of the Criminologist. Here we present the final product of nearly a year’s
worth of work, but none of this would be possible without Chris Eskridge, Susan Case, and Nicole Coldiron, who, aside from
re-generating this incredible process year after year, are masters of immediately resolving every type of glitch imaginable. We
also want to thank Rob Sampson for his brilliant vision and unrelenting support, the entire program committee who did a superb
job forming the largest number of sessions to date, and Arelys Madero-Hernandez for her assistance, including her meticulous
management of correspondence and the (seemingly) never-ending revisions to the preliminary program. We hope you enjoy the
stimulating context made possible by the contributions of all these individuals.
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2012 ASC PROGRAM COMMITTEE
Program Committee Co-Chairs
Pamela Wilcox and John Wooldredge
University of Cincinnati
Graduate Assistant to the Program Chairs
Arelys Madero-Hernandez, University of Cincinnati
Program Committee
Mike Benson
Bianca Bersani
Anthony Braga
Christopher Browning
Kevin Buckler
Patrick Carr
Mitchell Chamlin
Ellen Cohn
Heith Copes
Stacy DeCoster
Matt DeLisi
Molly Dragiewicz
Laura Dugan
John Eck
Manuel Eisner
Jamie Fader
Abigail Fagan
Lynnette Feder
Mary Finn
Dana Haynie
David Jacobs
Scott Jacques
Valerie Jenness
David Kirk
Janet Lauritsen
Colin Loftin
John MacDonald
David McDowall
Ed McGarrell
Jean McGloin
Jody Miller
Andrew Papachristos
Karen Parker
Robert Nash Parker
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Alex Piquero
Sheetal Ranjan
Jeffrey Ian Ross
Judith Ryder
Eric Silver
Cassia Spohn
Ben Steiner
William Terrill
Volkan Topalli
Xia Wang
Barbara Warner
Mark Warr
Brandon Welsh
Emily Wright
Sheldon Zhang
GENERAL MEETING INFORMATION
REGISTRATION
The ASC desk is located in the Honore Ballroom on the lobby level of the hotel and will be open:
Tuesday
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
1:00 am – 6:00 pm
8:00 am – 6:00 pm
8:00 am – 5:30 pm
8:00 am – 6:00 pm
8:00 am – 11:00 am
At registration, each person will receive a name badge and program. Safeguard your copy of the program. Due to the
limited number of programs, lost or missing ones may not be replaced.
EMPLOYMENT EXCHANGE
The Employment Exchange is a Professional Employment Service and will be located in the Exhibit Hall, 4th floor (exhibit
area) of the hotel. Information from employers is available concerning positions for which they are hiring. Additionally,
information on those seeking employment who have registered with the Society will be on file. Personnel in the
Employment Exchange Service can assist in scheduling interviews in private areas. The Service will be open:
Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
1:00 pm – 5:00 pm
9:00 am – 5:00 pm
9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Chair, Employment Exchange
Kenneth Adams
University of Central Florida
PROGRAM LISTING AND INDEX
The program and index of participants include all those persons whose names were submitted as participants to the ASC
Executive Office when the program went to press. Any omissions or inaccuracies in the program are certainly inadvertent
and apologies are extended in advance.
PERSONAL HEALTH AND SECURITY
All meeting areas are non-smoking areas. Individuals attending the Annual Meeting should keep in mind the need to be
attentive to their personal security and the protection of their property. As a reminder, do not leave money or valuables in
rooms. If a safe is needed, please ask your hotel front desk for information.
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2012 ASC DIVISIONS
DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
Chair: Aaron Kupchik, University of Delaware
302-831-3267
[email protected]
DIVISION OF CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
Chair: Donna Selman, Eastern Michigan University
248-921-5083
[email protected]
DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY
Chair: David Weisburd, George Mason University/ Hebrew University
703-993-4079
[email protected]
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
Chair: Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
804-827-0844
[email protected]
DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY
Co-chair: Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
513-556-5828
[email protected]
Co-chair: Robert Jerin, Endicott College
978-232-2184
[email protected]
DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME
Chair: Hillary Potter, University of Colorado at Boulder
303-601-5876
[email protected]
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
Chair: Amy D’Unger, Georgia Institute of Technology
404-894-7448
[email protected]
For more information regarding ASC divisions please see http://asc41.com/divisions.htm
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ASC DIVISION MEETINGS AND EVENTS
DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
Thursday, November 15
3:30 – 4:20 pm
DCC Executive Meeting
Adams Room, 6th Floor
4:30 – 5:50 pm
DCC General Business Meeting
Adams Room, 6th Floor
6:00 – 10:00 pm
DCC Social
Adams Room, 6th Floor
Friday, November 16
2:00 – 3:20 pm
DCC Journal Editorial Board Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
Thursday, November 15
8:00 – 9:20 am
DCS Annual Business/Awards Breakfast Meeting
Monroe, 6th Floor
7:00 – 8:30 pm
DCS Social
Flat Top Stir-Fry Grill – 30 S. Wabash
DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY
Tuesday, November 13
1:00 – 5:00 pm
DEC Workshop: Practical Solutions for
Administering Multi-Site Randomized Trials
Chicago, 5th Floor
2:00 pm – 3:20 pm
The Joan McCord Award Lecture and the Academy
of Experimental Criminology Awards Ceremony
Monroe, 6th Floor
3:30 pm – 4:50 pm
DEC Meet and Greet Awards Ceremony
Monroe, 6th Floor
5:00 pm – 6:20 pm
Celebrating the recipient of the 2013 Stockholm
Prize in Criminology
Monroe, 6th Floor
Wednesday, November 14
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16
11:00 am – 12:20 pm
DIC Business Meeting (Open to All Participants)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
12:30 pm – 1:50 pm
DIC Awards Presentation and Reception (Open to
All Participants)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
2:00 pm – 3:20 pm
Criminologists without Borders (Open to All)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY
Thursday, November 15
11:00 am – 12:20 pm
DOV General Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
12:30 pm – 1:50 pm
DOV Executive Board Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
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ASC DIVISION MEETINGS AND EVENTS
DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14
2:00 pm – 3:20 pm
DPCC Board Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Thursday, November 15
11:00 am – 12:20 pm
DPCC General Business Meeting
Grant Park, 6th Floor
2:00pm – 3:20 pm
DPCC Mentoring Meeting
Grant Park, 6th Floor
Friday, November 16
12:30 pm – 2:00 pm
DPCC Luncheon and Symposium
Monroe, 6th Floor
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
Tuesday, November 13
4:00 pm – 7:00 pm
DWC Feminist Criminology Theory in Action
Workshop
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Wednesday, November 14
8:00 – 9:30 pm
DWC Social
The Gage Restaurant – 24 S Michigan Ave.
Thursday, November 15
7:30 am – 9:00 am
DWC Breakfast
Adams Room, 6th Floor
DWC Feminist Criminology Editorial Board
Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
DWC Breakfast
Adams Room, 6th Floor
3:30 pm – 4:50 pm
Friday, November 16
7:30 am – 9:00 am
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ASC DIVISIONS’ SESSIONS OF INTEREST
DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
2:00pm
Life With(out) the Possibility of Parole: An Examination of Parole Decision
Making in California
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Communities and Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Attitudes of Court/Correctional Workers and Clients
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Challenges and Opportunities in Reducing the Use of Segregation in U.S. Prisons
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Cross-National Comparisons and Parole Decision Making
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs 1
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Prosecution and Sentencing: A Cross-National Perspective
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Inmate Health Related Issues in Correctional Institutions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Novel Integration of Communication and Criminal Justice Theory: Effective
Probation/Parole Supervision of Drug-Involved
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Predicting Parole Decisions and Outcomes
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Innovative Approaches to Community Corrections
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence and America's Prison Nation
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Educational Programs in Correctional Institutions
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Effectiveness of Institutional Programming
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Community Context and Prisoner Reentry
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
The National Institute of Corrections' Norval Morris Project
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
A Discussion on Pennsylvania's Incarceration Binge
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Contemporary Issues in Probation
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Effects of Incarceration on Offenders
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Attitudes Toward Capital Punishment
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Improving Prison Research
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Honest Opportunity ProbationEnforcement (HOPE): Fidelity, Process and Impact
Evaluations
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Putting Research into Practice: Implications of Recent Corrctions Reforms in the
United States
Salon 10, 3rd Floor
Coercive Confinement in Ireland: Patients, Prisoners and Penitents (Organized by
The Prison Journal)
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Social Theory of Moderninity and its Legacies for Punishment and Society
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Beyond Individual-Level Predictors of Prisoner Reentry
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Poetry and Photographs Reflecting on Mass Incarceration
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Effects of Incarceration on Families and Relationships
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
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DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
2:00pm
3:30pm
5:00pm
Meeting Healthcare Needs in Community Corrections Settings
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Corrections and Reentry
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Report of the NAS Committee on Deterrence and the Death Penalty
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Applying Criminological Theories to Prisoner Reentry
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Empirical Studies of Inmate Deviance
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Inmate and Environmental Influences on Prisoner Maladjustment
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs II
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
A Multi-site Study of the Implications and Intersections of Trauma, Mental Illness
and Offending Among Women in Jail
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Implementing HOPE (Honest Opportunity Probation Enforcement) in Different
Jurisdictions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Examining the Collateral Effects of Incarceration
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Prison Population and Theory Evaluation
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Extralegel Factors and Federal Sentencing Outcomes
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Parental Incarceration and Offending Across the Life Course
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
Division on Corrections and Sentencing Annual Business/Awards Breakfast
Meeting
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
The Human Face of Community Corrections: How People Matter
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Keys to Success in Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Examining Influences on Correctional Populations and Resources
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Inmate Misconduct and Responses to Misconduct in Jails
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Minority Offenders
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs III
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Correctional Programming for Women
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Comparative Perspectives on Wrongful Convictions
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Effects of Sentencing Policies
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Offender Rehabilitation and Prisoner Reentry
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Innovative Approaches to Ensuring Evidence-Based Practices in Corrections
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Offender Intervention Policies
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Correctional Contexts: Implications for Policy
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Sex Offenders and Mentally Ill Offenders
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Incarcerated Juveniles, Institutional Classification, and Programming
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Prison and Jail Staff
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
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DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
12:30pm
2:00pm
3:30pm
Monitoring High-Risk Sex Offenders with GPS Technology: Findings From an
Evaluation of the California Parole Supervision Program
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs IV
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Serving Specialized Populations in the Community
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women I
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Examining the Dosage Risk Relationship
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Interim Outcomes from a Community-Based Prisoner Reentry Initiative: Safer
Return
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Social Support and Prisoner Reentry
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Influences on Incarceration Rates
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Prison Construction
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Capital Punishment in the United States: Trends and Implications
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Operational Concerns in Community Corrections: Offender Rehabilitation, Case
Management, and Risk Assessment
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
Prosecution and Sentencing of "Specialized" Offenders
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Evidence-Based Crime Policy II
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Mental Health Issues in Juvenile Justice
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Influences on Attitudes toward Capital Punishment
Clark 5, 7th Floor
The Collateral Consequences of Incarceration I
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Restorative Offender Reentry
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
The Impact of Criminal Record on Post-Release Employment
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Death Penalty: Theoretical and Legal Issues
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Sex Offenders: Housing, Sentencing, and Public Policies
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Experimental Criminology: Using Experimentation to More Deeply Explore
Criminal Justice Issues within Interventions (Organized by the Division of
Experimental Criminology)
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Important Issues in Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Neo-Marxian and Neo-Foucaldian Approaches to Long-Term Trends in the Prison
Population: Business Cycles, Formulas of Government, and Citizenship
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
9:30am
Predictors of Case Outcomes
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Charging and Plea Bargaining Decisions
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Macro-Level Studies of the Effects of Incarceration
Clark 7, 7th Floor
The American Prison: Imagining a Different Future I
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Legal and Ethical Issues in Institutional Corrections
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
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DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
2:00pm
The Impact of Institutional Culture and the Incarceration Experience on the
Reentry Process
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Risk-Needs-Responsivity in Community Corrections
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Methods and Findings of the What Works in Reentry Clearinghouse
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Interviews with Global Leaders in Policing, Courts, and Prisons
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Social Psychological Theory and Wrongful Convictions
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Working the Joint: Issues Involving Correctional Staff
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Prison Community Learning Experiences of Undergraduate Students: Inside-Out
Prison Exchange and Alternatives to Violence
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Pretrial Risk Assessment: Status, Issues, and Opportunities for Improvement
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Translational Tools to Implement Evidence-Based Practices (EBPs)
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women II
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Understanding Racial and Ethnic Disparity in the Probation Revocation Process
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Fostering Positive Youth Development: Reframing the Aims of Juvenile Justice
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
New Approaches to Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Women in Prison in England and Wales and South Korea
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black Progress
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Prosecutors and Defense Attorneys
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
The National Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program: Research and Ethics
Clark 5, 7th Floor
New Perspectives on Children of Incarcerated Parents
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Special Populations in Correctional Institutions
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice in America, 1975-2025: Punishment and Prevention
Empire Room, Lobby Level
The Collateral Consequences of Incarceration II
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Historical Dynamics of the U.S. Criminal Justice System
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Punishment and Society: The Political Variable, Comparatively (Organized by the
Journal "Punishment and Society")
Price Room, 5th Floor
Individual-Level Predictors of Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Injustice before Trial: Reviewing the Early Decisions During the Formal Criminal
Justice Process and the Impact They May Have on Criminal Defendants
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Hearing the Voices of Imprisoned Women
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Wrongful Convictions and the Reliability of Eyewitness Identification
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Plea Bargaining, Juror Decision Making and Post-Conviction Supervision
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women III
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Reducing Racial Disparities in Juvenile Justice Systems
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
13
DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
2:00pm
3:30pm
Jury Decision Making in Death Penalty Cases
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Variations in Incarceration among Nation-States
Price Room, 5th Floor
The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Research Resources:
Opportunities for Funding, Publication, and Data
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
The Impact of New York State’s Rockefeller Drug Law Reform
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Current Issues in Federal Sentencing: Fast-Track Programs for Immigration
Offense
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Juvenile Justice and Delinquency I
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Race and Justice: Wrongful Convictions of African American Men (Organized by
the Division on People of Color and Crime)
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Evidence-Based Crime Policy III
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Characteristics of the Courtroom Workgroup and Case Outcomes
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Management Issues in Correctional Institutions
Clark 7, 7th Floor
The American Prison: Imagining a Different Future II
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Critical Explorations in Contemporary Penality
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Reentry, Recidivism, and Desistance: Exploring Mechanisms
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Serious Juvenile Offenders, Life Imprisonment, and the Death Penalty
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Violence: Assessing Risk among Incarcerated Populations and Pathways to
Desistence
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Regulatory and Penal Responses to Financial Crimes
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Sentencing Juveniles in Adult Court: Considerations and Consequences
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
The Triple Bottom Line: People, Planet, and Profit in Corrections
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30am
Problem Solving Courts
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Future of Capital Punishment in the United States
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Historical Trends in Punishment and Rehabilitation
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Parents in Correctional Instititutions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Prison Issues and Culture in Media and Social Debate
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Surviving Prison: Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Using Risk Assessment Instruments for Juvenile Justice Reform
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Evaluating of Strategies to Address Sex Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
What Role Can Nonprofit Organisations Play in Prisoner Reentry? Exploring
International Opportunities and Challenges
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Life After Death Row: Exonerees' Search for Community and Identity
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
The Effects of Contextual and Organizational Factors on Prisoner Reentry
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
14
DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
10:00am
What Works in Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
The Efficacy of Juvenile Justice Interventions
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Visitation and Contact with Families in Correctional Facilities
Clark 7, 7th Floor
The Politics of Punishment and Correction
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Perceptions of Punitiveness
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
The Gains and Challenges of Penal Abolition: A Roundtable Discussion
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Transformations in Punishment and Society
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
Advancing Media Scholarship: Theory, Measurement, and the Role of Crime
Experts
Clark 9, 7th Floor
9:30am
Convict Criminology: Perspectives on the Prison Experience
Clark 9, 7th Floor
11:00am
A Critical Analysis of Criminological Theory
Clark 10, 7th Floor
High Profile Events: Media Coverage and Implications
Clark 3, 7th Floor
State Crime Victimology I
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
State Crime Victimology II
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Constructing Social Problems: School Crime, Ecstasy Deaths, and Terrorism
Clark 9, 7th Floor
2:00pm
Convict Criminology: Poetry and Photographs Reflecting on Mass Incarceration
Clark 9, 7th Floor
3:30pm
Crime and Identity
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Media Presentations of Subterranean Cultural Groups
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Tearing Down the Streets: Ten Years On
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Cultural Criminology of the Rural
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Criminological Theory: Cultural and Critical Perspectives
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
12:30pm
5:00pm
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
11:00am
6th Annual Workshop on State Crime
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
12:30pm
Feminist Theory and Pedagogy
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
2:00pm
Teaching Critical Criminology: Fostering Critical Thinking
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Cyborgs and Avatars and Monsters (Oh My!): Criminal Conversations with
Feminist Science and Technology Studies
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
New Research in Cultural Criminology
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
2:00pm
Occupy Criminology
Clark 9, 7th Floor
3:30pm
Motorcycle Outlaws? Biker Identities, Narratives and Consumption
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
15
DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
3:30pm
Routledge Handbook of Critical Criminology (Organized by the Division on
Critical Criminology)
Clark 5, 7th Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
10:00am
Teaching Critical Criminology: Teaching Specific Content Areas Critically
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
1:00pm
Division of Experimental Criminology Workshop: Practical Solutions for
Administering Multi-site Randomized Trials
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs I
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
11:00am
Police Reform, Training and Crime: Experimental Evidence from Colombia’s Plan Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Cuadrantes
12:30pm
Experimental Criminology: Effects of Restorative Justice Conferencing Ten Years
On
Room: Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Honest Opportunity Probation Enforcement (HOPE): Fidelity, Process and Impact Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Evaluations
2:00pm
The Joan McCord Award Lecture and the Academy of Experimental Criminology
Fellows Induction and Awards Ceremony
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
3:30pm
The Division of Experimental Criminology Meet and Greet and Awards Ceremony Monroe Room, 6th Floor
5:00pm
Celebrating the Recipient of the 2013 Stockholm Prize in Criminology
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Crime and Place: Place-Based Police Strategies
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00am
A Randomized Controlled Trial Testing the Effects of the TASER on Cognitive
Functioning
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
11:00am
Experimental Criminology in Cyberspace: The Effects of Warning and
Surveillance on Hackers' On-Line Activities
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
12:30pm
Journal of Experimental Criminology Luncheon
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Long-Term Experimental Evaluations of Developmental Prevention Programs
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
The Los Angeles Predictive Policing Experiment
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Police and Crime Control
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Evidence-Based Crime Policy I
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Experimental Criminology: Alternative Methods to Overcome Challenges in
Randomized Controlled Experiments
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Qualitative Fieldwork Contributions to Experimental Design and Implementation
Science in Criminal Justice Settings
Salon 10, 3rd floor
James Q. Wilson on Policing and Experimentation
Empire Room, Lobby Level
2:00pm
16
DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
3:30pm
Experimental Criminology: Evaluating Police Legitimacy and Procedural Justice
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
Experimental Criminology: Using Experimentation to More Deeply Explore
Criminal Justice Issues within Interventions
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
11:00am
An Experimental Design Comparing the Effectiveness of Web-Based Classroom
Training on Learning Transfer among Juvenile Corrections Staff
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
12:30pm
Experimental Criminology: The Sociology of Knowledge Generation - The People Salon 6, 3rd Floor
and Agencies Behind Experimental and Quasi-Experimental Research in Policing
2:00pm
Quasi-Experimental Methods in Policing and Crime
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Experimental Research in Criminology
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of Near Repeat Surveillance as a Method of
Crime Prevention
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
10:00am
Experimental Criminology: An Experimental Evaluation of Supervision Strategies
for High Risk Probationers in Philadelphia
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
Prosecution and Sentencing: A Cross-National Perspective
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
International Perspectives on Juvenile Protection and Welfare Policies
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Cross-National Comparisons and Parole Decision-Making
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Sold into Extinction: The Global Trade in Endangered Species (Division of
International Criminology 2012 Distinguished Book Award Winner
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
The Community Context of Crime and Social Problems: Studies from around the
World
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Blue Criminology: The Power of United Nations Ideas to Counter Crime Globally
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Violence Against Women: International Perspectives
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Victimization Risk in International Contexts
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
International Policing
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Crime and Crime Control in Africa
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Policing Muslim Communities: International and Comparative Perspectives
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Best Practices and Emerging Research in Identification of Human Trafficking
Victims
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Cross-National Survey Analyses of Crime-Related Issues
Price Room, 5th Floor
International Perspectives on Terrorism and Political Violence
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Approaches to International Criminal Justice Coursework
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
17
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
12:30pm
2:00pm
Boko Haram: The Emergence of an Al-Qaeda Affiliated Terrorist Group in
Nigeria
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Coercive Confinement in Ireland: Patients, Prisoners, and Penitents
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Research Informing the Response to Transnational Organized Crime
Price Room, 5th Floor
Immigration and Perceptions of Crime
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Evidence-Based Practice in European Juvenile Justice
Price Room, 5th Floor
Correlates of Immigration and Offending
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Immigration and Marginality
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
Traditional Organized Crime in the Modern World I
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Crime and Victimization in South Korea
Price Room, 5th Floor
Crime and Place: Wildlife Crime - The Importance of Place and Context
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Understanding the 2011 English Riots
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Measuring Crime against Business at the Cross-National Level
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
United Nations Panel I: Ecological Crime
Price Room, 5th Floor
Organized Crime in the Digital Age
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Cultural Approaches to Green Criminology: New and Emerging Perspectives
Clark 9, 7th Floor
International Perspectives in Crime Control Policy Transfer
Price Room, 5th Floor
Organized Crime, Situational Crime Prevention, and Routine Activity Theory
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Justice Reform in A Changing World
Clark 9, 7th Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
12:30pm
2:00pm
3:30pm
Criminalization and Community: Cultural Criminological Perspectives
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Organized Crime: International and U.S. Perspectives
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Human Trafficking: Measurement Challenges and Empirical Advances
Price Room, 5th Floor
American Memories: Atrocities and the Law (author is recipient of 2012 Adler
Distinguished Scholar Award from the Division of International Criminology)
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Theoretical Advances in the Cross-National Context
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Legal Equity and Corruption Across Nations
Price Room, 5th Floor
War Crimes, Genocide & Crimes against Humanity: An International Journal
Clark 1, 7th Floor
Corruption and Organized Crime in Europe (Organized by the International
Association for the Study of Organized Crime)
Clark 9, 7th Floor
When Violence Turns Deadly: Correlates of Homicide in Europe
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
International Context and Criminological Theory Evaluation
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Juvenile Justice Practices Across Nation-States
Price Room, 5th Floor
18
DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
Justice and the Rule of Law in the African Continent
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Criminal Justice in South Korea
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Social Processes in the Immigration-Crime Nexus
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Interviews with Global Leaders in Policing, Courts, and Prisons
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Making Sense of Adolescent to Parent Violence: International Perspectives
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Dutch Study Group on the Transition from Juvenile Delinquency into Adult Crime Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Studies on the Problem of Corruption
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
International Perspectives on Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
United Nations Panel II: Democratic Policing and Human Rights - Models and
Measurement
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
International Perspectives on Perceptions of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice Issues in Armenia, Honduras, Europe and the United States
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Terrorist, Drug, and Smuggling Organizations
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
The International Control of Money Laundering
Salon 10, 3rd Floor
2:00pm
International Research on Drug Use, Dealing, and Control II
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
3:00pm
Zombie Criminology: Can a Nation-Centric Discipline Survive a Globalized
World Context?
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Spatial Criminology in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
12:30pm
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
3:00pm
Traditional Organized Crime in the Modern World II
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
International/Comparative Crime
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30am
Enablers of Organized Crime
Clark 1, 7th Floor
10:00am
United Nations Panel: Criminology at the UN
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Mafia Investments
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Trafficking in Art and Antiquities
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Strategic Countermeasures for Anti-Counterfeiting, Intellectual Property Rights,
and Product Fraud: Enabling the Shift to Prevention
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
Responding to Sexual Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
9:30am
BJS and the Use of Administrative Data on Crime – What We Are Learning from
NIBRS
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Collective Forms of Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
19
DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
11:00am
Victimization Risk in International Contexts
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
12:30pm
Empirical Assessment of Victims and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Race, Women, and Victimization: New Uses of NCVS Data
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Dating Violence
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
State and National Responses to Elder Abuse, Mistreatment, and Neglect
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Repeat and Poly-Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Children at Risk for Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Victims of Intimate Partner Violence
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Bullying
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
2:00pm
3:30pm
5:00pm
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00am
Bullying and Offending
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Property, Fraud, and Cyber Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
9:30am
Criminal Justice and State Responses to Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
11:00am
Victimization Risk Over Time: Research Findings from the NCVS
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Understanding the Impact of Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Consequences of Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Robbery Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Victimization Prevention Strategies
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Help-Seeking among Victims
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Crime Costs and Victim Harm: Using Victimization Data to Study the
Consequences of Crime
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Victim Contact with the Criminal Justice System
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Mechanisms Underlying Violence and Victimization
Clark 5, 7th Floor
12:30pm
2:00pm
3:00pm
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
Rates and Trends of Childhood Exposure to Crime, Violence and Abuse
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
9:30am
Intimate Partner Violence
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Sexual Assault Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Vulnerability to Victimization Among the Elderly and Disabled
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
International Perspectives on Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Community Perceptions of Intimate Partner Abuse among High School Students
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Marital Status and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
11:00am
12:30pm
20
DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
2:00pm
3:30pm
College Students as Bystanders in Preventing and Responding to Crimes Against
Women on College Campuses
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Victimization Across Sexual Contexts
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Responding to Sexual Assault
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
New Findings and Explanations for Victimization among Hispanics/Latinos
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30am
10:00am
Patterns of Teen Dating Violence: Victimization and Perpetration
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
School-Based Responses to Victimization and Offending
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Patterns of Violence Against Women in Alaska: Estimates, Correlates, and
Batterer Interventions
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
The Link between Victimization and Offending
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
9:30am
Intimate Partner Violence among Immigrant Populations
Millenium Parlor, 6th Floor
Contemporary Approaches to Latin@ Criminology I
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Author-Meets-Critic: Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and America's
Prison Nation
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author-Meets-Critics: Detained Without Cause: Muslims' Stories of Detention and
Deportation in America after 9/11
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
11:00am
12:30pm
Crime in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
Inequality and Criminal Justice Resources and Experiences
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Role of Race in Perceptions of Justice
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Crime and Crime Control in Africa
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Criminology in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
Policing Muslim Communities: International and Comparative Perspectives
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Hate Crime Issues: Community Organizing and Impacts
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
International Policing
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Authors-Meet-Critics: A Theory of African American Offending: Race, Racism,
and Crime
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Violence Against Women: International Perspectives
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Race, Women, and Victimization: New Uses of NCVS Data
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Conducting Research and Analyzing Data on Violence Against American Indian
and Alaska Native Women
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Boko Haram: The Emergence of an Al-Qaeda Affiliated Terrorist Group in
Nigeria
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
21
DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
2:00pm
3:30pm
5:00pm
Immigration and Perceptions of Crime
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Race and Pathways to Delinquency
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Students Meet Scholars: Reconceptualizing Diversity
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Understanding Racial Disparities in Arrests, Searches, and Seizures
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Yà Miáo Zhù Zhǎng: How China's “Zeal” for Industrialization Invites WhiteCollar and Corporate Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Race Issues in Contemporary Criminology
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Immigration and Marginality
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Association of Chinese Criminology & Criminal Justice General Meeting
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Author-Meets-Critics: 5 Grams: Crack Cocaine, Rap Music, and the War on Drugs Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Correlates of Immigration and Offending
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00am
Crime and Victimization in South Korea
Price Room, 5th Floor
The Experience of Hate Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Minority Offenders
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Immigration and the Changing Social Fabric of American Cities
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
11:00am
Division on People of Color and Crime General Business Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
12:30pm
Crime and Justice in America, 1975-2025: Drugs, Guns, Race, Violence
Empire Room, Lobby Level
2:00pm
Division on People of Color and Crime Mentoring Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Media Construction of Gender and Race I
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Race, Ethnicity, and Crime
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Race and Juvenile Justice
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
African Criminology and Justice Association Meeting
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Korean Society of Criminology in America (KSCA) Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Race, Neighborhood Stigma, and Perceptions of Disorder
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
9:30am
3:30pm
The Ecology of Racial/Ethnic Composition, Immigration, and Violence: Assessing
the Continuity and Changes
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00am
Justice and the Rule of Law in the African Continent
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Criminal Justice in South Korea
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
9:30am
Race, Ethnicity and Crime/Delinquency Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
11:00am
Understanding Racial and Ethnic Disparity in the Probation Revocation Process
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
The Impact of Race on Police Use of Force: Lessons from Empirical Research
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
22
DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
11:00am
Author-Meets-Critics: Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of Black
Progress
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
12:30pm
International Perspectives on Perceptions of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Indigenous Peoples and the Problem of Criminology
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Division on People of Color and Crime Luncheon & Symposium
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Race, Immigration, and Fear of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Reducing Racial Disparities in Juvenile Justice Systems
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Authors-Meet-Critics: Race and Justice: Wrongful Convictions of African
American Men
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Association of Chinese Criminology & Criminal Justice Board Meeting
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
New Findings and Explanations for Victimization among Hispanics/Latinos
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Contemporary Approaches to Latin@ Criminology II
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Spatial Criminology in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
Private and Public Reactions to Minorities and Their Crimes
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
2:00pm
3:30pm
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30am
10:00am
Why Are Nigerian Nurses Vulnerable to Deadly Intimate Partner Violence?
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Women's Offenses and Victimization: Examining International Contexts
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Need for Creating Therapeutic Communities within South African
Correctional Facilities
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Author-Meets-Critics: The Black Child-Savers: Racial Democracy and Juvenile
Justice
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
4:00pm
Feminist Criminology Theory and Action Pre-Conference Workshop
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00am
9:30am
11:00am
Responding to Sexual Victimization
Buckingham Room, 3rd Floor
Intimate Partner Violence Among Immigrant Populations
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
A Troubled Marriage: Domestic Violence and the Legal System
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Gender and Fear of Crime
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Novel Integration of Communication and Criminal Justice Theory: Effective
Probation/Parole Supervision of Drug-Involved Women
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Online Child Sexual Exploitation: Child Pornography and Sexting
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and America's Prison Nation
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Gender Issues in Policing
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Gender Vulnerabilities: Care and Treatment of Girls in the Justice System
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
23
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
11:00am
12:30pm
2:00pm
3:30pm
5:00pm
Public Opinion, Neighborhood Context, and Sex Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
The Criminal Justice Response to Domestic Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Rape is Rape: How Denial Fuels the Hidden Crisis
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Violence Against Women: International Perspectives
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Using Qualitative Methods in Sensitive Research Situations
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Race, Women, and Victimization: New Uses of NCVS Data
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Conducting Research and Analyzing Data on Violence Against American Indian
and Alaska Native Women
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Court Responses to Domestic and Intimate Partner Violence: Protection Orders
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Best Practices and Emerging Research in Identification of Human Trafficking
Victims
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Gender, Recidivism, and Authorities' Decisions
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Clarifying Institutional Anomie Theory: Issues of Conceptual Clarity, Race, and
Gender
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Dating Violence
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Effects of Incarceration on Families and Relationships
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Child Maltreatment, Exposure to Violence, and Victimization: Life Course
Predictors and Consequences
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Girls in Trouble: Getting Beyond the "Bad Girls" Rhetoric
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Typologies of Sex Offending
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Alcohol and Sexual Assault: Findings From the Women’s Stress and Support
Study
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Gender and White Collar Crime in the 21st Century
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Repeat and Poly-Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Students Meet Scholars: Reconceptualizing Diversity
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Children at Risk for Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Victims of Intimate Partner Violence
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
A Multi-Site Study of the Implications and Intersections of Trauma, Mental
Illness, and Offending Among Women in Jail
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Professional Development: Juggling Parenthood and Academia
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
The Gendered Nature of Intimate Partner Violence: Female Perpetration and
Mutual Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Crime, Gender, and Feminism
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
In Memory of Roslyn Muraskin: Scholar, Advocate, Teacher, and Mentor
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Parental Incarceration and Offending Across the Life Course
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
24
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
7:30am
DWC Breakfast Meeting
Adams Room, 6th Floor
8:00am
Marriage, Romantic Relationships, and Desistance
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Family Processes and Delinquency
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Adolescent and Dating Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Sex Offenders and Society I
Salon 10, 3rd Floor
The Response of the Criminal Justice System to Sexual Assault
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Gender and the Desistance Process
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Gender and Criminal Behavior
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Sex Offenders and Society II
Salon 10, 3rd Floor
Ph.D. Mama: Balancing Motherhood and the Academy
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Correctional Programming for Women
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Juvenile Sex Offending
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Media Constructions: Violence, Gender, and Justice
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
9:30am
11:00am
The Role of Parents and the Family in Juvenile Justice Proceedings and Outcomes LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
12:30pm
2:00pm
Family Violence: Child Abuse, Child-to-Parent Abuse, and Mutual Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Teaching about Race, Class, and Gender in Criminology
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
New and Ongoing Issues in Data Collection of Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual
Violence, and Stalking
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Post-Incarceration Experiences Among Women and Other Disadvantaged Groups
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Gender and Crime
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Family Violence and Youthful Violent Offenders
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Prosecutorial and Judicial Strategies for Domestic Violence Cases
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Gender and Criminological Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Spatial Analysis of Sex Offenses
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Human Trafficking: Measurement Challenges and Empirical Advances
Price Room, 5th Floor
Sexual Offenses and Minors
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Righting the 'Wrongs' of Violent Young Women
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Women, Gender, and Crime
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Feminist Theory and Pedagogy
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women I
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Cyborgs and Avatars and Monsters (Oh My!): Criminal Conversations with
Feminist Science and Technology Studies
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Media Construction of Gender and Race I
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Social Support and Social Stigma: Effects on the Lives of Sexual Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
25
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
2:00pm
Recognizing Violence and Victimization: Contexts and Questions
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
3:30pm
Division on Women and Crime Feminist Criminology Editorial Board Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Media Construction of Gender and Race II
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Sex Trafficking/Prostitution
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Reproductive Rights as a Criminal Justice Issue
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Gender and Drugs I
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Developmental Pathways to Family Violence
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7:30am
DWC Breakfast Meeting
Adams Room, 6th Floor
8:00am
Rates and Trends of Childhood Exposure to Crime, Violence and Abuse
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Sex Offenders: Housing, Sentencing, and Public Policies
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Pimping and Sex Trafficking
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Training, Treatment, and Assessment for Family Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Sexual Assault Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Sexual Assault and College Students: Experiences and Attitudes
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Criminal Careers and Intergenerational Transmission of Sex Offenders
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Public Welfare and Policy Issues Related to Female Deviance and Victimization
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Making Sense of Adolescent to Parent Violence: International Perspectives
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Sexed and Gendered Pathways to Offending and Recidivism
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Ideas for Recycling/Greener Efforts at the ASC Meetings
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women II
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
The Gendered Nature of Intimate Partner Violence: Male Perpetration
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
State and Local Perspectives of Trafficking in Persons
Price Room, 5th Floor
The Gendered and Racialized Delinquency and Juvenile Justice Experiences of
At-Risk Youth
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Women in Prison in England and Wales and South Korea
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Gender Dynamics and Responding to the Challenging or Resistant Student
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Gender and Drugs II
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Marital Status and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
New Perspectives on Children of Incarcerated Parents
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Community Perceptions of Intimate Partner Abuse among High School Students
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Sex Offenders: Patterns of Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
9:30am
11:00am
12:30pm
26
DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
12:30pm
2:00pm
3:30pm
Intimate Partner Violence among Same-Sex Couples
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Consequences of Childhood Maltreatment
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Hearing the Voices of Imprisoned Women
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
College Students as Bystanders in Preventing and Responding to Crimes Against
Women on College Campuses
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women III
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Victimization Across Sexual Contexts
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Trafficking in Persons for Labor Exploitation in the United States
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Strategies for Managing Sexual Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Students Meet Scholars: Gender and Crime
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Public Perceptions of Sex Crimes
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Responding to Sexual Assault
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Assault, and Pregnancy
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Mentoring Undergraduates in Research and Scholarship
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
GPS Monitoring Technologies and Domestic Violence: An Evaluation Study
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30am
10:00am
Patterns of Teen Dating Violence: Victimization and Perpetration
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
The Future of Batterer Programs: Reassessing Evidence-Based Practice
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Parents in Correctional Institutions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Evaluation of Strategies to Address Sex Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Why Are Nigerian Nurses Vulnerable to Deadly Intimate Partner Violence?
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Women's Offenses and Victimization: Examining International Contexts
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Testing Forensic Evidence in Sexual Assault Crimes: Research in Houston to
Improve Outcomes for Victims and the Justice System
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Visitation and Contact with Family in Correctional Facilities
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Patterns of Violence Against Women in Alaska: Estimates, Correlates, and
Batterer Interventions
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Women and Violence: Exploring Context and Typologies
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Measuring Gender and Crime
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Measuring Human Trafficking: Examples in Operationalization and
Instrumentation
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Teaching Sensitive Topics: Intimate Partner Abuse, Rape, and Victim Blaming
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
The Gendering of Offending
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
27
OTHER MEETINGS AND EVENTS
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
8:00am - 5:00pm
Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice Group Meeting
Clark 3, 7th Floor
1:00pm - 5:00pm
Workshop: Analyzing the Project on Human Development in Chicago
Neighborhoods
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
1:00pm - 5:00pm
Workshop: GIS, Mapping, and Spatial Modeling
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
3:00pm - 7:00pm
ASC Executive Board Meeting
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
12:30pm - 1:50pm
Green Criminology Working Group
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
Journal of Quantitative Criminology Editorial Board Meeting
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
Open Meeting of the Eurogang Group
Montrose 5, 7th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
The Joan McCord Award Lecture and the Academy of Experimental
Criminology Awards Ceremony
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
Victims & Offenders Editorial Board Meeting
Montrose 4, 7th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Crime Science Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 6:30pm
Health and Justice Meeting
Clark 1, 7th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Homicide Research Working Group 2012 Richard & Carolyn Block
Awards
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
5:00pm - 6:20pm
Association of Chinese Criminology & Criminal Justice General
Meeting
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
5:00pm - 6:20pm
Celebrating the Recipient of the 2013 Stockholm Prize in Criminology
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
6:30pm - 8:00pm
ASC Awards Plenary
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
8:00pm - 10:00pm
ASC Opening Social
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
8:00pm - 10:00pm
Ron Akers and His Bluegrass Band
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
9:30am - 10:50am
Student Affairs Committee Meeting
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
ASC Mentoring Committee Meeting
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
Outstanding Article Award Committee Meeting
Clark 1, 7th Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
Tribute to Hugo Adam Bedau
Montrose 5, 7th Floor
12:30pm - 1:50pm
Journal of Experimental Criminology Luncheon
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
1:30pm - 2:45pm
Ice Cream Social (sponsored by Wiley)
Exhibit Hall
2:00pm - 3:20pm
A Discussion with the Director of the National Institute of Justice
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
African Criminology and Justice Association Meeting
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Journal of Research in Crime & Delinquency Board Meeting
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Korean Society of Criminology in America (KSCA) Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Minority Affairs Committee Meeting
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
28
OTHER MEETINGS AND EVENTS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
3:30pm - 4:50pm
War Crimes, Genocide & Crimes against Humanity: An International
Journal
Clark 1, 7th Floor
5:00pm - 6:20pm
International Association for the Study of Organized Crime Business
Meeting (IASOC)
Clark 9, 7th Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7:30am - 8:30am
Criminology Editorial Board Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
9:30am - 10:50am
ASC 2013 Program Committee Meeting
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
9:30am - 10:50am
Caribbean Crime Study Group Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
9:30am - 10:50am
CMC Board Meeting
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
9:30am - 10:50am
Homicide Studies Editorial Board Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
ASC Policy Committee Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
Association of Doctoral Programs of Criminology & Criminal Justice
Business Meeting (ADPCCJ)
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
11:00am - 12:20pm
Ideas for Recycling/Greener Efforts at the ASC Meetings
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
12:30pm - 2:00pm
Rutgers University Alumni Association Luncheon
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
12:30pm - 1:50pm
The Scientific Advisory Committee of the NSCR (Closed Session)
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
ASC Business Meeting
Clark 8, 7th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
Criminologists without Borders (Open to All)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
2:00pm - 3:20pm
National White Collar Crime Center Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
ASC Publications Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 5:00pm
Issues of ACCCJ
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
3:30pm - 4:50pm
Proposed Division of Developmental and Life-Course Criminology:
Organizational Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
5:00pm - 6:00pm
ASC Presidential Justice Award and Presidential Address
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
6:00pm - 7:00pm
ASC Presidential Reception
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
9:00pm - 11:00pm
Minority Ferllowship Dance Featuring The Hot Spots
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
10:00pm - 1:00am
Minority Fellowship Dance Featuring Matthew Skoller Blues’s Band
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
11:30am - 1:00pm
ASC Closing Brunch
Empire Room, Lobby Level
12:00pm - 5:00pm
ASC Executive Board Meeting
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
29
RECEPTIONS
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Handbook of Punishment and Society
Homicide Research Working Group
Pretrial Justice Institute and Urban Institute
University of Nebraska at Omaha
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Empire Room, Lobby Level
2:00 - 3:20 pm
5:00 - 6:20 pm
5:00 - 8:00 pm
9:00 - 11:00 pm
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Urban Institute
Carolina Academic Press
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
5:00 - 7:00 pm
7:00 - 10:00 pm
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7:00 - 9:00 pm
American University
Arizona State University
Doctorate in Cultural and Global Criminology (the
DCGC, a European consortium led by the University of
Kent)
Florida State University
George Mason University
Georgia State University
Griffith University
Illinois State University
Indiana University, Bloomington
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Korean Institute of Criminology
Michigan State University
Northeastern University
Pennsylvania State University
Rutgers University
Simon Fraser University
University at Albany, SUNY
University of California, Irvine
University of Cambridge
University of Cincinnati
University of Maryland, College Park
University of Massachusetts Lowell
University of New Haven
University of Pennsylvania
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
30
Cresthill, 3rd Floor
Adams Room, 6th Floor
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Spire Parlor, 6th floor
Harold Washington Suite 9150
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Salons 4,5,6, 3rd Floor
Salon 10, 3rd Floor
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Honore, Lobby Level
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Salons 7,8,9, 3rd Floor
Price Room, 5th Floor
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
DIRECTORY OF EXHIBITORS
The exhibits present many publications of interest to those in criminology. Many of the books exhibited are authored by
members of The American Society of Criminology. The exhibit is located on the fourth floor in Exhibit Hall, 4th Floor
of the hotel. Many exhibitors will give discounts on books ordered at the meeting.
Exhibit hours are: Wednesday
Thursday
Friday
1:00 pm - 5:00 pm
8:30 am - 5:00 pm
8:30 am - 5:00 pm
Adler School of Professional Psychology
Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences
Anderson Publishing
Ashgate Publishing Company
Asian Criminological Society
Association Book Exhibit
Carolina Academic Press
Columbia University Press
Eleven International Publishing
European Society of Criminology
Homicide Research Working Group
International Society of Criminology
Jones & Bartlett Learning
Justice Studies Association
Korean Institute of Criminology
Korean Society of Criminology in America
LFB Scholarly Publishing LLC
Lynne Rienner Publishers
National Archive of Criminal Justice Data/ICPSR
National Gang Crime Research Center
NYU Press
Office of Justice Programs
Oxford University Press
Pearson
Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group
Rutgers University Press
SAGE
Springer
Texas State University
Thinking Strings
Wadsworth Cengage Learning
Waveland Press
West/Foundation Press
Wiley-Blackwell
Wolters Kluwer Law & Business
Photo Exhibit
There will be a photo exhibit in the Exhibit Hall. The photo exhibition consists of photos taken by prisoners in American
facilities, of prisoners in American facilities. The exhibit is organized by artist Dave Adler and Emily Horowitz.
31
ASC PRESIDENTS
2013
2012
2011
2010
2009
2008
2007
2006
2005
2004
2003
2002
2001
2000
1999
1998
1997
1996
1995
1994
1993
1992
1991
1990
1989
1988
1987
1986
1985
1984
1983
1982
1981
1980
1979
1978
Robert Agnew
Robert Sampson
Steve Messner
Richard Rosenfeld
Todd Clear
Robert J. Bursik, Jr.
Michael Tonry
Gary LaFree
Julie Horney
Francis T. Cullen
John H. Laub
Lawrence W. Sherman
C. Ronald Huff
Roland Chilton
David P. Farrington
Margaret A. Zahn
James F. Short, Jr
Charles F. Wellford
Freda Adler
Jerome H. Skolnick
Delbert S. Elliott
Alfred Blumstein
John Hagan
Joan Petersilia
Joan McCord
William J. Chambliss
Don M. Gottfredson
Lloyd E. Ohlin
Austin T. Turk
Albert J. Reiss, Jr.
Travis Hirschi
Harry E. Allen
Frank Scarpitti
Daniel Glaser
Ronald L. Akers
C. Ray Jeffery
1977
1976
1975
1974
1973
1972
1971
1970
1969
1968
1967
1966
1965
1964
1963
1962
1961
1960
1959
1958
1957
1956
1955
1954
1953
1952
1951
1950
1949
1948
1947
1946
1945
1944
1942
1941
32
William E. Amos
Gilbert Geis
Nicholas N. Kittrie
Edward Sagarin
John C. Ball
Charles L. Newman
Simon Dinitz
Albert Morris
Bruno Cormier
Gerhard O.W. Mueller
Marvin Wolfgang
Walter C. Reckless
Walter C. Reckless
Walter C. Reckless
Donal E.J. MacNamara
Donal E.J. MacNamara
Donal E.J. MacNamara
Donal E.J. MacNamara
Marcel Frym
John Kenney
John Kenney
Richard Hankey
Richard Simon
William Dienstein
William Dienstein
Frank Boolsen
Douglas Kelley
Douglas Kelley
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
Orlando Wilson
August Vollmer
PROGRAM SUMMARY
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
8:00 am
Campbell Collaboration Crime and Justice Group Meeting
Clark 3, 7th Floor
1:00 pm
Division of Experimental Criminology Workshop: Practical Solutions for
Administering Multi-site Randomized Trials
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Workshop: GIS, Mapping, and Spatial Modeling
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Workshop: Analyzing the Project on Human Development in Chicago
Neighborhoods
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
3:00 pm
ASC Executive Board Meeting
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
4:00 pm
Division on Women and Crime Feminist Criminology in Theory and
Action Workshop
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00 am
Responding to Sexual Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
The Privatization of Police and Police-Private Sector Partnerships
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Arrest, Prosecution and Sentencing: Policies and Practices
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Life With(out) the Possibility of Parole: An Examination of Parole
Decision Making in California
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Making Prosecution Fairer and More Effective
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Communities and Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Attitudes of Court/Correctional Workers and Clients
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Challenges and Opportunities in Reducing the Use of Segregation in U.S.
Prisons
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Advancing Media Scholarship: Theory, Measurement, and the Role of
Crime Experts
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Neutralization Theory and Crime/Deviance
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Contemporary Approaches to Latin@ Criminology I
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Cross-National Comparisons and Parole Decision-Making
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Biosocial Criminology: Genetics
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs I
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Educating for Change: Innovations in Schools and Juvenile Facilities
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Assassinations: Socio-historical Analyses
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
International Perspectives on Juvenile Protection and Welfare Policies
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Turning Points in the Life Course: Military, Employment, and Parenting
Experiences
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
The Role of Strain on Criminal Behavior
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Controlling Corporate Crime: Problems and Prospects
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
33
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
8:00 am
9:30 am
Intimate Partner Violence among Immigrant Populations
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Enterprising Crimes in Trans-National Contexts
Price Room, 5th Floor
Understanding Service Needs, Trends in Drug Use, and Drug Costs in
Arrestee Populations
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Patterns and Trends in Computer Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Social Control, Privacy, and Policy
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Advances in Qualitative Methods in Criminology
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Prosecution and Sentencing: A Cross-National Perspective
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Applying Theory to the Study of the Police
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Brick to Click: Scaling the Addition of an Online Program in
a Traditional Face to Face Environment
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Criminal Justice Education for the Rule of Law in the
Webinar Age: Lessons Learned and the Way Ahead
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: CSI: Media, Juries, and Burden of Proof
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: A Troubled Marriage: Domestic Violence and the
Legal System
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Drug and Alcohol Use among Students
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
BJS and the Use of Administrative Data on Crime – What We Are
Learning from NIBRS
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Building and Enhancing Police Agency Capacity for Research and
Analysis: Prospects and Approaches
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Drug Court Outcomes
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Extralegal Factors and Sentencing Outcomes
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Controversies in Policing
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Inmate Health-Related Issues in Correctional Institutions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Policing by the Numbers
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Capital Punishment in the United States and Abroad
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Perspectives on the Prison Experience
Clark 9, 7th Floor
The Community Context of Crime and Social Problems: Studies from
around the World
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Neighborhoods, Space, Networks and Crime
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Collective Forms of Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Emerging Issues in Crime Policy: Benevolence and Bystander Behavior
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Turning Points and Labeling Processes
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Residential Segregation and Crime Trends
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
34
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
9:30 am
11:00 am
Gender and Fear of Crime
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Frameworks for Understanding Perceptions of Justice
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Methodological Issues in Studying Recidivism and Disparity
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Fear of Crime and Public Policy
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Deterrence Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Active Shooter and Serial Killing Events
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Confronting the Crises in Criminology: History, Knowledge, and Legacy
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Crime in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
Novel Integration of Communication and Criminal Justice Theory:
Effective Probation/Parole Supervision of Drug-Involved Women
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Public Health and Justice: Reducing Risks and Threats to Health of
Criminal Offenders, Their Victims, and Their Communities
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Author Meets Critics: Sold into Extinction: The Global Trade in
Endangered Species
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Online Child Sexual Exploitation: Child Pornography and Sexting
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Offenders and Places
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Predicting Parole Decisions and Outcomes
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Author Meets Critics: After the Crime: The Power of Restorative Justice
Dialogues
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Innovative Approaches to Community Corrections
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Homeland Security and Officer Characteristics
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Changing Aspects of Gangs
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Criminology Education I
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Critical White Studies in Criminology
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Criminological Theory: Advancing Perspectives
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Arrested Justice: Black Women, Violence, and
America's Prison Nation
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Detained Without Cause: Muslims' Stories of
Detention and Deportation in America after 9/11
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Peers and Delinquency
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Victimization Risk in International Contexts
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Gender Issues in Policing
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Current Issues in Crime Analysis and Intelligence-Led Policing
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Risk Terrain Modeling: Theories and Methods of Risk
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
35
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
11:00 am
A Critical Analysis of Criminological Theory
Clark 10, 7th Floor
High Profile Events: Media Coverage and Implications
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Offenders' Perspectives on Predation, Retaliation, and Drug Dealing
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Educational Programs in Correctional Institutions
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Social Media: Research and Contemporary Issues
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Inequality and Criminal Justice Resources and Experiences
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
New Research on Violence, Gangs, and Drug Dealing in the Pittsburgh
Youth Study
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
State Crime Victimology I
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Effectiveness of Institutional Programming
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Empirical Tests and Extensions of Moffitt's Life-Course Approach
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Advancing the Study of Collective Efficacy
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Community Context and Prisoner Reentry
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Gender Vulnerabilities: Care and Treatment of Girls in the Justice System
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Role of Race in Perceptions of Justice
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Crime and Crime Control in Africa
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Evaluating Self-Control Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Public Opinion, Neighborhood Context, and Sex Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Gaining a Better Understanding of Terrorist Violence
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
The Criminal Justice Response to Domestic Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Criminology in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
Bridging the Gap between Research and Practice, Part I: A National
Perspective
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
The National Institute of Corrections’ Norval Morris Project
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Innovations in Teaching Criminology and Criminal Justice Courses I
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Author Meets Critics: Policing Muslim Communities: International and
Comparative Perspectives
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Broken Windows Policing and Theory at Microplaces
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Hate Crime, Community Organizing and Impacts
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime and the Courts
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Smart Policing: Results and Implications
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
New and Innovative Uses of Official Data
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Accounts of Desistance: Results from Four Diverse Populations
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
36
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
11:00 am
12:30 pm
International Policing
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: A Discussion on Pennsylvania's Incarceration Binge
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Rape is Rape - How Denial Fuels the Hidden Crisis
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Criminology Education II
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Blue Criminology: The Power of United Nations Ideas to
Counter Crime Globally - A Monographic Study
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: A Theory of African American Offending: Race,
Racism, and Crime
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Violence Against Women: International Perspectives
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Multi-level Models of Neighborhood Effects
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Empirical Assessment of Victims and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Policing Juveniles: Policy, Practice, and Intervention
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Contemporary Police Challenges: Consolidation, Crime Control, and
Establishment Data
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Spatiotemporal Patterns and Changes in Philadelphia Metropolitan Crime
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Using Qualitative Methods in Sensitive Research Situations
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Contemporary Issues in Probation
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Race, Women, and Victimization: New Uses of NCVS Data
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Effects of Incarceration on Offenders
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Constructing Social Problems: School Crime, Ecstasy Deaths, and
Terrorism
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Risky Facilities and Crime
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Paul Goldstein’s Tripartite Framework on Drugs and Violence: Looking
Back and Forward after 30 Years
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
State Crime Victimology II
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Emerging Issues in Crime Policy: Crime Control and Prevention
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Current Research in Biosocial Criminology
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: The Spatial Patterns of Crime
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Attitudes toward Capital Punishment
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Improving Prison Research
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Juvenile Detention Alternatives
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Explaining/Understanding Marijuana Use
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Conducting Research and Analyzing Data on Violence Against American
Indian and Alaska Native Women
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
37
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
12:30 pm
2:00 pm
Controlling Environmental Crime: Problems and Prospects
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Green Criminology Working Group
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Court Responses to Domestic and Intimate Partner Violence: Protection
Orders
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Cross-National Survey Analyses of Crime-Related Issues
Price Room, 5th Floor
Honest Opportunity Probation Enforcement (HOPE): Fidelity, Process
and Impact Evaluations
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Putting Research Into Practice: Implications of Recent Sentencing and
Corrections Reforms in the States
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Experimental Criminology: Effects of Restorative Justice Conferencing
Ten Years On (Organized by the Division of Experimental Criminology)
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Media, the Internet, and Terrorism
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Juvenile Crime in Places
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Community Disorder, Disadvantage, and Fear of Crime
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
International Perspectives on Terrorism and Political Violence
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
The Validity and Reliability of Evidence
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Non-Metropolitan Policing
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Approaches to International Criminal Justice Coursework
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Best Practices and Emerging Research in Identification of
Human Trafficking Victims
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Boko Haram: The Emergence of an Al-Qaeda Affiliated
Terrorist Group in Nigeria
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Building (And Then Crossing) Bridges: A Discussion of
Multi-Disciplinary Approaches to the Study of Corporate Crime
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Gender, Recidivism, and Authorities' Decisions
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Coercive Confinement in Ireland: Patients,
Prisoners, and Penitents (Organized by The Prison Journal)
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Social Theory of Modernity and its Legacies for Punishment and
Society
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
State and National Responses to Elder Abuse, Mistreatment, and Neglect
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Exploring Police Integrity
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Legal and Methodological Analyses of Issues Facing Courts
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Clarifying Institutional Anomie Theory: Issues of Conceptual Clarity,
Race, and Gender
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Students Meet Scholars: Qualitative Research
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
The Anthropology of Crime, Policing, and Justice in New York City
Clark 10, 7th Floor
38
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
2:00 pm
Student Attitudes toward Crime and Justice
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Desistance from Gangs
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Beyond Individual-Level Predictors of Prisoner Reentry
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Poetry and Photographs Reflecting on Mass
Incarceration
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Studies of Neighborhood Culture: Police Legitimacy, Attachment, and
Reputation
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Dating Violence
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Effects of Incarceration on Families and Relationships
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Child Maltreatment, Exposure to Violence, and Victimization: Life
Course Predictors and Consequences
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Disadvantage, Community Context, and Crime
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Girls in Trouble: Getting Beyond the "Bad Girls" Rhetoric
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Attitudes toward Police in Varying Contexts
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Missing Data
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Public Reactions to Crime
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Education and Crime
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Theoretical Explanations for Violence
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
The Social Context of Hate Crime
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Division on People of Color and Crime Board Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Typologies of Sex Offending
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
The Joan McCord Award Lecture and the Academy of Experimental
Criminology Fellows Induction and Awards Ceremony
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Victims & Offenders Editorial Board Meeting
Montrose 4, 7th Floor
Research Informing the Response to Transnational Organized Crime
Price Room, 5th Floor
Violence as Situational Action
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Alcohol and Sexual Assault: Findings From the Women’s Stress and
Support Study
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Issues and Directions in Program Evaluation Research
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Gender and White Collar Crime in the 21st Century
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Journal of Quantitative Criminology Editorial Board Meeting
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
A Comparative Consideration of Gangs and Criminal Groups
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Rationality, Choice, and Sanctions
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Immigration and Perceptions of Crime
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
39
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
2:00 pm
Race and Pathways to Delinquency
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Meeting Healthcare Needs in Community Corrections Settings
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police Approaches and Citizen Views
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Can Criminology be Viewed as a Type of Applied Ethics?
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Corrections and Reentry
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Coverage of Federal Law Enforcement in Criminal Justice
Curriculum
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Handbook of Punishment and Society Reception
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
Report of the NAS Committee on Deterrence and the Death Penalty
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Community-Driven Violence Prevention: Operational Pitfalls and Political Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Dilemmas Associated with Community Partnerships
3:30 pm
Repeat and Poly-Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Crime, Justice, and Politics in the City as Seen Through The Wire I
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Legal Issues and Court Processing
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Tearing Down the Streets: Ten Years On
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: Reconceptualizing Diversity
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Health and Justice Meeting
Clark 1, 7th Floor
A Nuanced Understanding of Victimization: Special Circumstances
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Integrating Community and Sociocultural Context into Juvenile Risk
Assessment
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Applying Criminological Theories to Prisoner Reentry
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Empirical Studies of Inmate Deviance
Clark 7, 7th Floor
The Impact of Media on Individual Perceptions of Crime and Formal
Controls
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Crime and Identity
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Future Pathways for the Study of Peer Influence
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Children at Risk for Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
International Perspectives on Crime Prevention
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Homicide Research Working Group 2012 Richard & Carolyn Block
Awards
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Crime Science Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Integrated Theoretical Approaches to Crime across the Life Course
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Risk Terrain Modeling Case Studies
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Fear of Crime: Contextual Considerations
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
40
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
3:30 pm
Media Presentations of Subterranean Cultural Groups
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Victims of Intimate Partner Violence
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
The Marginalized and the Law in Cross-National Settings
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Life Course Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Burglars and Target Selection
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Toward a Better Understanding of Terrorist Behavior
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Contemporary Issues in Green Criminology
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
The Division of Experimental Criminology Meet and Greet and Awards
Ceremony
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Evidence-Based Practice in European Juvenile Justice
Price Room, 5th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Breaking Rules: The Social and Situational
Dynamics of Young People's Urban Crime
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Understanding Racial Disparities in Arrests, Searches, and Seizures
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Issues in Federal Sentencing: Mandatory Minimums and Citizenship
Status
Salon 10, 3rd floor
New Directions in Crime and Punishment
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Biological Correlates of Schizophrenia, Psychopathy, Homicide, and
Aggression
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Yà Miáo Zhù Zhǎng: How China's “Zeal” for Industrialization Invites
White-Collar and Corporate Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Examining Chronic Nuisance Regulations
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Academic and Practitioner Collaborations in Criminal Justice Education
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Inmate and Environmental Influences on Prisoner Maladjustment
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs II
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police Contact, Gun Carrying, and Human Trafficking
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Criminology, The Body, and Mass Violence
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Changing Consequences of a Criminal Conviction
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Critical Approaches to Studying Treatment and Progressive
Alternatives for Intervention
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Corruption in Higher Education within the Former
Yugoslavia
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Crime and Criminal Justice in Disaster
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Roundtable: A School-Based Mentoring Program: First Year Evaluation
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Appearance Bias as it Operates in Perceptions of Crime and Victimization Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
41
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
3:30 pm
5:00 pm
A Multi-Site Study of the Implications and Intersections of Trauma,
Mental Illness, and Offending Among Women in Jail
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Offender Intervention and Evidence-Based Practice
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Bullying
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Crime, Justice, and Politics in the City as Seen Through The Wire II
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Aftermath of Wrongful Convictions
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Race Issues in Contemporary Criminology
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Pretrial Justice Institute and Urban Institute Reception Honoring Professor Burnham 5, 7th Floor
John Goldkamp, the 2012 August Vollmer Award Winner
Professional Development: Juggling Parenthood and Academia
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Collective Behavior and Crime
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Implementing HOPE (Honest Opportunity Probation Enforcement) in
Different Jurisdictions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Blueprints for Gang Prevention
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Covering the Courts: Media Content and Strategies to Communicate
Outcomes
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice in Entertainment Media
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Cultural Criminology of the Rural
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Criminology, Causality, and Public Policy
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Responding to the Needs of Victims in Cases of Wrongful Conviction
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Inmate Experiences: Findings from Projects and Qualitative Studies
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Homicide Research Working Group Reception
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Psychopathic Traits and Empathy in Child and Adolescent Twins
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Immigration and Marginality
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Examining the Collateral Effects of Incarceration
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Criminal Justice Perceptions: Critical Appraisals
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Juvenile Risk Assessment Instrumentation
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Prison Population and Theory Evaluation
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Victimization and Micro-Social Perspectives
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Defining and Responding to White-Collar Law Breaking
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
The Gendered Nature of Intimate Partner Violence: Female Perpetration
and Mutual Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
The Announcement the 2013 Stockholm Prize in Criminology
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
42
PROGRAM SUMMARY
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
5:00 pm
Author Meets Critics: Discovery of Hidden Crime: Self-Report
Delinquency Surveys in Criminal Policy Context
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Extralegal Factors and Federal Sentencing Outcomes
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Scaling-Up Crime Prevention Initiatives
Salon 10, 3rd floor
International Research on the Neighborhood Context of Crime
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Place-Based Police Strategies
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Association of Chinese Criminology & Criminal Justice General Meeting
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Studies in Drugs and Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Community Prevention and Governance
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Want Data? We Got It! Information on and Access to OJJDP’s Juvenile
Justice Data Collections
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Author Meets Critics: 5 Grams: Crack Cocaine, Rap Music, and the War
on Drugs (Organized by the Division on People of Color and Crime)
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Bailing Out: The Use of Bail and Pre-Trial Detention
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police Authority and Use of Force
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Should ACJS and ASC Merge?
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Criminological Theory: Cultural and Critical Perspectives
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Crime, Gender, and Feminism
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Crime Policy and Public Safety
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Correlates of Immigration and Offending
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
In Memory of Roslyn Muraskin: Scholar, Advocate, Teacher, and Mentor
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Parental Incarceration and Offending Across the Life Course
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
6:30 pm
ASC Awards Plenary
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
8:00 pm
ASC Opening Social - Ron Akers and His Bluegrass Band
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
Division on Women and Crime Social
The Gage Restaurant (24 S.
Michigan Ave.)
University of Nebraska at Omaha Reception
Empire Room, Lobby Level
9:00 pm
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
7:30 am
Division on Women and Crime Breakfast
Adams Room, 6th Floor
8:00 am
Bullying and Offending
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police and Communities
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Broadening Methodology in Innocence Research
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Traditional Organized Crime in the Modern World I
Clark 10, 7th Floor
43
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
8:00 am
9:30 am
Justice System Stakeholders and the Creation of Delinquency
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Visual Culture and the Iconography of Crime
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Crime and Place: Wildlife Crime - The Importance of Place and Context
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Property, Fraud, and Cyber Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
New Advances in Cybersecurity
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Marriage, Romantic Relationships, and Desistance
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Disadvantage, Neighborhood and Interpersonal Violence: Research
Underway by Faculty Affiliated with the ECIC
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
The Human Face of Community Corrections: How People Matter
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Scaling and Measurement
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Understanding Fear of Crime in Diverse Contexts
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Family Processes and Delinquency
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Understanding the 2011 English Riots
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Measuring Crime against Business at the Cross-National Level: Good
Practices, Recent Experiences and Future Developments
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Adolescent and Dating Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Division on Corrections and Sentencing Annual Business/Awards
Breakfast Meeting
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Crime and Victimization in South Korea
Price Room, 5th Floor
Sex Offenders and Society I
Salon 10, 3rd floor
The Experience of Hate Crime
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime, Policing and Corrections in the Rural Context
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
A Randomized Controlled Trial Testing the Effects of the TASER on
Cognitive Functioning
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Police Culture, Governance, and Canada
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Social Networking, Flash Mobs, and Its Impact on Law
Enforcement
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Providing Expert Commentary to the Media: The Do’s and
Don’ts
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Strategies for Reaching Undergraduate Students in the
Classroom: A Roundtable Discussion
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
School and Extra-Curricular Inequalities, Delinquency, and Discipline
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Approaches to Drug Control
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Mental Disorder and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
New Developments in Police Investigation Practices
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
44
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
9:30 am
Methodological Issues and Policy Changes in the Court System
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Response of the Criminal Justice System to Sexual Assault
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: The Growing Chorus - We Ended Student
Apathy with Team-Based Learning Part I
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
The Ethnography of Punishment: Exploring Residual and Emergent
Elements of Contemporary Penal Interventions
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Keys to Success in Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Moving Toward a Greater Understanding of Gangs
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Examining Influences on Correctional Populations and Resources
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Convict Criminology: Prisoners Stories
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Blind Spots in Research on General Strain Theory
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Structural Determinants of Crime Rates: The Role of Institutional
Engagement in Solving the Age Structure-Crime Rate Puzzle
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Criminal Justice and State Responses to Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Inmate Misconduct and Responses to Misconduct in Jails
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Gender and the Desistance Process
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Internal and External Neighborhood Factors Affecting Crime
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Minority Offenders
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Making it Work: Correcting the Juvenile Justice System and Adjusting the LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Program
Influences on Attitudes toward Police
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Policing Issues in the Modern World
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Gender and Criminal Behavior
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
High-Risk Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Large Scale Frauds and Abuses of Power
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
New Faculty Workshop
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Critical Criminology
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
United Nations Panel I: Ecological Crime
Price Room, 5th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Theft of a Nation and Who Are the Criminals?
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Criminal Justice Drug Abuse Treatment Studies (CJDATS): Improving
Assessment and Case Planning in Corrections
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Sex Offenders and Society II
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Biosocial Influences on the Development and Consequences of SelfControl
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
45
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
9:30 am
11:00 am
Crime and Place: Fear and Disorder
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Immigration and the Changing Social Fabric of American Cities
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Qualitative and Quantitative Approaches to Motor Vehicle Theft
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Routines, Situations, and Crime
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
CrimeSolutions.gov: Improvements to Content and Utility
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Report of the National Academies on Juvenile Justice Reform
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs III
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police Education
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: News Coverage of Crime and Justice in 2012
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Organized Crime in the Digital Age
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: The Future of Criminology: A Tribute to David Farrington
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Ph.D. Mama: Balancing Motherhood and the Academy
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Policing and Public Safety
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Correctional Programming for Women
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Research on Methamphetamine Use and Control
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Research on Criminal Careers
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Student Affairs Committee Meeting
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
Victimization Risk Over Time: Research Findings from the NCVS
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Measuring Police Legitimacy and Fairness: The Police-Civilian
Interaction (PCI) Survey
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Comparative Perspectives on Wrongful
Convictions
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Effects of Sentencing Policies
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: The Growing Chorus - We Ended Student
Apathy with Team-Based Learning Part II
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Outstanding Article Award Committee Meeting
Clark 1, 7th Floor
Underscoring the Need for Police-Community Collaboration
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Offender Rehabilitation and Prisoner Reentry
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Why Has Massive Incarceration not Made Illegal Drugs More Expensive? Clark 5, 7th Floor
Innovative Approaches to Ensuring Evidence-Based Practices in
Corrections
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Cultural Approaches to Green Criminology: New and Emerging
Perspectives
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Public Policy and Corporate Harms
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
46
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
11:00 am
Understanding the Impact of Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Offender Intervention Policies
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Great American City: Chicago and the Enduring
Neighborhood Effect
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Division on People of Color and Crime General Business Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
6th Annual Workshop on State Crime
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Biosocial Criminology: Myriad Influences
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Gentrification, Foreclosures, and Neighborhood Crime
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Juvenile Sex Offending
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Media Constructions: Violence, Gender, and Justice
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Quantitative Analyses of Official Data
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
The Role of Parents and the Family in Juvenile Justice Proceedings and
Outcomes
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Friendship Networks and Delinquency
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Experimental Criminology in Cyberspace: The Effects of Warning and
Surveillance on Hackers’ On-Line Activities
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Informing Efforts to Reduce Terrorism
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Division of Victimology General Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Family Violence: Child Abuse, Child-to-Parent Abuse, and Mutual
Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Tribute to Hugo Adam Bedau
Montrose 5, 7th Floor
International Perspectives in Crime Control Policy Transfer
Price Room, 5th Floor
Bridging the Gap between Research and Practice, Part II: A State
Perspective
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Outcomes of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System: New Findings from
the Northwestern Juvenile Project
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Innovations in Teaching Criminology and Criminal Justice Courses II
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Discovering Desistance: Increasing and Using Knowledge about Desisting Salon 12, 3rd Floor
from Crime
ASC Mentoring Committee Meeting
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Rational Choice Theory and Crime
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Offending Tactics for Terrorists and Other Bad People
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Discovering Airport Security: The Interaction between People, Places,
Business, Security and Crime Prevention
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Anti-Civil Rights Activism in Mississippi and North Carolina, 1955-1975
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
47
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
11:00 am
12:30 pm
Employment and Crime
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Defending Veterans Entangled in the Courts: Legal and Ethical Solutions
and Strategies
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police Recruitment, Technology, and Alcohol
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Teaching about Race, Class, and Gender in Criminology
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: LEMAS: A Twenty-Five Year Overview and Assessment
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: New and Ongoing Issues in Data Collection of Intimate
Partner Violence, Sexual Violence, and Stalking
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Organized Crime, Situational Crime Prevention, and Routine
Activity Theory
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Police Training and Handling of Forensic Evidence
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Post-Incarceration Experiences Among Women and Other Disadvantaged
Groups
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Gender and Crime
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Family Violence and Youthful Violent Offenders
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Consequences of Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Policing Diverse Populations
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Police Community Collaborations
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Prosecutorial and Judicial Strategies for Domestic Violence Cases
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Journal of Experimental Criminology Luncheon
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Evidence-Based Crime Policy I
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Correctional Contexts: Implications for Policy
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Juvenile Justice Practitioners and the Political Rhetoric of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Sex Offenders and Mentally Ill Offenders
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Incarcerated Juveniles, Institutional Classification, and Programming
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Justice Reform in A Changing World
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Organized Crime in The Internet Age
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Robbery Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Prison and Jail Staff
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice in America, 1975-2025. Drugs, Guns, Race, Violence
Empire Room, Lobby Level
The Biosocial Foundations to Antisocial Phenotypes
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
New Perspectives on Theory and Culture
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Monitoring High-Risk Sex Offenders with GPS Technology: Findings
From an Evaluation of the California Parole Supervision Program
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
48
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
12:30 pm
Neighborhoods and Fear of Crime
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Perceptions of Justice and Implications for Desistance
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Criminalization and Community: Cultural Criminological Perspectives
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Gender and Criminological Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Spatial Analysis of Sex Offenses
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Organized Crime: International and U.S. Perspectives
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Division of Victimology Executive Board Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Understanding Terrorists
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Human Trafficking: Measurement Challenges and Empirical Advances
Price Room, 5th Floor
Author Meets Critics: American Memories: Atrocities and the Law
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Student Perceptions and Fear of Crime: Implications for Schools
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Routine Activities, Lifestyles, and Crime Risk
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Long-Term Experimental Evaluations of Developmental Prevention
Programs
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Research on Age and Crime
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Considering the Spatial Dimension of Social Networks, Social Capital,
Collective Efficacy, and Crime
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Sexual Offenses and Minors
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Spatial Models of Criminal Groups and Crime Pattern Formation
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Criminal Justice Research and Evaluation: Social Science Research at the
National Institute of Justice
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Operational and Organizational Dynamics of Terrorism
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Evaluating Prisoner Reentry Programs IV
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Police-Community Partnerships to Prevent Crime
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Practicing Restorative Circles at a Juvenile Hall
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Preparing a New Generation of Translational Criminologists:
Is it Time to Reform Doctoral Education in Criminology and Criminal
Justice?
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Righting the 'Wrongs' of Violent Young Women
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Women, Gender, and Crime
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Substance Abuse and Crime
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Historical and Contemporary Issues in Immigration and Crime Policy
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Feminist Theory and Pedagogy
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Police and Crime Control
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
49
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
1:30 pm
Ice Cream Social (sponsored by Wiley)
Exhibit Hall
2:00 pm
Victimization Prevention Strategies
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Crisis Intervention, Mental Health, and Drugs
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Realizing the Potential of Technology for Policing: Results from a MultiSite Study
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Prosecutorial Decision Making: Predictors and Effects
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: Meet the Editors Part I - The Publishing
Process
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Firearms Access, Restrictions, and Campuses
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Serving Specialized Populations in the Community
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Violence and the Police
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women I
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Media and Crime
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Cyborgs and Avatars and Monsters (Oh My!): Criminal Conversations
with Feminist Science and Technology Studies
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Help-Seeking among Victims
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Surveillance, Security, and Crime Prevention
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Tribute to James Q. Wilson
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Division on People of Color and Crime Mentoring Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
A Discussion with the Director of the National Institute of Justice
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Intragenerational and Intergenerational Antecedents of Delinquency and
Crime
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Neighborhood Networks and Offending Networks
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Examining the Dosage Risk Relationship
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Media Construction of Gender and Race I
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Historical Analyses of Crime and Legal Change
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Theoretical Advances in the Cross-National Context
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
General Strain Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Social Support and Social Stigma: Effects on the Lives of Sexual
Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Exploring Variations of Cybercrime Victimization and Offending
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Critical Perspectives on Crime over the Life Course
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Legal Equity and Corruption Across Nations
Price Room, 5th Floor
50
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
2:00 pm
3:30 pm
The Ecology of Racial/Ethnic Composition, Immigration, and Violence:
Assessing the Continuity and Changes
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Experimental Criminology: Alternative Methods to Overcome Challenges
in Randomized Controlled Experiments (Organized by the Division of
Experimental Criminology)
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Explorations of Qualitative Methods in Criminology
Salon 10, 3rd floor
School Discipline and the School-to-Prison Pipeline
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Firearms Acquisition, Mobility, and Markets
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Drugs, Crime, and Public Policy
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Recognizing Violence and Victimization: Contexts and Questions
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Interim Outcomes from a Community-Based Prisoner Reentry Initiative:
Safer Return
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Policing Full Circle
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Race, Ethnicity, and Crime
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Teaching Critical Criminology: Fostering Critical Thinking
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Research on Police Use of Pedestrian Stops and Searches
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Studying Mass-Mediated Crime and Terrorism: The
Development of a Shared, Collaborative Approach
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Race and Juvenile Justice
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
International Research on Drug Use, Dealing, and Control I
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Meaning and Construction of Criminal Networks
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Crime Costs and Victim Harm: Using Victimization Data to Study the
Consequences of Crime
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Use of Deadly Force
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: New Criminal Justice and Legal Perspectives
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Innovations in Analyzing Crime
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
African Criminology and Justice Association Meeting
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
War Crimes, Genocide & Crimes against Humanity: An International
Journal
Clark 1, 7th Floor
Criminological Theory: Revisiting the Past and Thinking about the Future
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Social Support and Prisoner Reentry
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Mechanisms Underlying Violence and Victimization
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Influences on Incarceration Rates
Clark 7, 7th Floor
51
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
3:30 pm
Author Meets Critics: Corruption and Organized Crime in Europe
(Organized by the International Association for the Study of Organized
Crime)
Clark 9, 7th Floor
When Violence Turns Deadly: Correlates of Homicide in Europe
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Victim Contact with the Criminal Justice System
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Prison Construction
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence
Has Declined
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Korean Society of Criminology in America (KSCA) Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Division on Women and Crime Feminist Criminology Editorial Board
Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Biosocial Criminology: Psychology
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Race, Neighborhood Stigma, and Perceptions of Disorder
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Capital Punishment in the United States: Trends and Implications
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Media Construction of Gender and Race II
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Perceptions of Police Legitimacy
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
The Social Construction of Juvenile Crime
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
International Context and Criminological Theory Evaluation
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Homicide: Latest Trends and Emerging Themes
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Neutralizations and White-Collar Crime
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Young Drug Users I
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Juvenile Justice Practices Across Nation-States
Price Room, 5th Floor
Operational Concerns in Community Corrections: Offender
Rehabilitation, Case Management, and Risk Assessment
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Teens, Sex, and Tech: Highlights from a Multi-State, OJJDP-Funded
Study
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Reviewing Strategic Initiatives to Reduce Gang Violence: Promising
Cross-National Approaches
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Experimental Criminology: Evaluating Police Legitimacy and Procedural
Justice (Organized by the Division of Experimental Criminology)
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Antisocial Behavior Throughout the Lifespan: Factors Predicting
Repeated Involvement in Crime
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Mental Disorder and the Justice System
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Testing Situational Action Theory: Morality and Moral Norms
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Disengagement from Illicit Groups
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
52
PROGRAM SUMMARY
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
3:30 pm
Journal of Research in Crime & Delinquency Board Meeting
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Moving Beyond “Do Drug Courts Work”: Results from Statewide
Evaluations
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Policing Unrest and Security
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Sex Trafficking/Prostitution
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Reproductive Rights as a Criminal Justice Issue
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Specialty Courts
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Surveillance and Cross-National Criminology
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Gender and Drugs I
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Division on Critical Criminology Executive Meeting
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
State Medical Marijuana Policies and Public Health Outcomes
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Developmental Pathways to Family Violence
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
4:30 pm
Division on Critical Criminology General Business Meeting
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
5:00 pm
International Association for the Study of Organized Crime Business
Meeting (IASOC)
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Poster Session
Grand/State Ballroom, 4th
Floor
The Urban Institute Reception
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
6:00 pm
Division on Critical Criminology Social
Adams Room, 6th Floor
7:00 pm
Division on Corrections and Sentencing Happy Hour Social
Flat Top Stir-Fry Grill (Off
Site / 30 S. Wabash)
Carolina Academic Press Reception
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7:30 am
8:00 am
Division on Women and Crime Breakfast
Adams Room, 6th Floor
Criminology Editorial Board Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Rates and Trends of Childhood Exposure to Crime, Violence and Abuse
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Deviance
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Analyzing the Role of Judicial Activism and Restraint in the
Constitutionalization of Criminal Procedure, Policy, and Practice
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Prosecution and Sentencing of "Specialized" Offenders
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Evidence-Based Crime Policy II
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Community, Courts, and Justice
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Mental Health Issues in Juvenile Justice
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Influences on Attitudes toward Capital Punishment
Clark 5, 7th Floor
53
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
8:00 am
The Collateral Consequences of Incarceration I
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Justice and the Rule of Law in the African Continent
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Discourse and Crime
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Crime and Governance in the Contemporary United States
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Restorative Offender Reentry
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
New Research in Cultural Criminology
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
The Impact of Criminal Record on Post-Release Employment
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Death Penalty: Theoretical and Legal Issues
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
The Methodology of Survey Research on Crime
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Criminal Justice in South Korea
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Race, Ethnicity and Crime/Delinquency Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Sex Offenders: Housing, Sentencing, and Public Policies
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Pimping and Sex Trafficking
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Training, Treatment, and Assessment for Family Violence
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Testing Crime Theories Using Comparative Data
Price Room, 5th Floor
Experimental Criminology: Using Experimentation to More Deeply
Explore Criminal Justice Issues within Interventions (Organized by the
Division of Experimental Criminology)
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
The Columbine Effect: Fear and the Expansion of School Antiviolence
Policy
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Predictors of Terrorist Violence
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Virtual Places and Physical Places of Crime
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Teaching about Victims of Crime
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Important Issues in Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Improving Police and At-Risk Youth Relations: Findings from the Teen
And Police Service (T.A.P.S.) Academy
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Family Dinners, Victimization, and Suicidal Ideation
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Field Worker and Informant Networking
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Support for a Learning Community in Criminal Justice
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Neo-Marxian and Neo-Foucaldian Approaches to Long-Term Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Trends in the Prison Population: Business Cycles, Formulas of
Government, and Citizenship
9:30 am
Social Processes in the Immigration-Crime Nexus
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
54
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
9:30 am
Police Legitimacy and Procedural Justice
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Predictors of Case Outcomes
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Charging and Plea Bargaining Decisions
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
CMC Board Meeting
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Professional Development: Academic versus Non-Academic Careers
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Health Issues Among Adolescents and Young Adults: Implications for
Deviance
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Religion, Culture, and Morality: Toward Understanding Values and Their
Presentation in Media
Clark 3, 7th Floor
National Incident Based Reporting System
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Macro-Level Studies of the Effects of Incarceration
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Media, Crime and Social Justice
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Perpetrator-Motive Research Design: Pilot Project with Convicted
Kidnappers
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
The American Prison: Imagining a Different Future I
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Sexual Assault Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Legal and Ethical Issues in Institutional Corrections
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Celebrating The Legacy Of Ruth Kornhauser: Personal and Professional
Reflections
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Caribbean Crime Study Group Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Homicide Studies Editorial Board Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Parenting Processes and Offspring Offending Across the Life Course
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Methodological Strategies for Investigating Neighborhood Effects
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
The Impact of Institutional Culture and the Incarceration Experience on
the Reentry Process
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Risk-Needs-Responsivity in Community Corrections
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Restorative Justice and Punishment
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Transforming Systems, Transforming Lives
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Religion and Crime/Delinquency
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Sexual Assault and College Students: Experiences and Attitudes
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Non-State Responses to Corporate Crime and Injustice
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Critical Perspectives on Gangs
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Methodological Issues Affecting Cross-National Research
Price Room, 5th Floor
Criminal Careers and Intergenerational Transmission of Sex Offenders
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
55
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
9:30 am
11:00 am
Qualitative Explorations of Youth, Crime and Community
Salon 10, 3rd floor
ASC 2013 Program Committee Meeting
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Neurocriminology: A Bohemian Rhapsody
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Methods and Findings of the What Works in Reentry Clearinghouse
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Public Welfare and Policy Issues Related to Female Deviance and
Victimization
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Public and Residential Places in Crime
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Roads Diverge: Patterns of Desistance for a Drug Involved Criminal
Cohort
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Methodological Advances in Delinquency Research
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Red Hook Community Justice Center: Process, Ethnographic, and Impact
Analyses
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
New Developments in Corporate Security
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Drug Courts Redux: A Look Back to the Future of Drug
Court Research and Administration
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Joseph Albini and Jeffrey McIllwain's Reflections on
Organized Crime: Past, Present, Future
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Engaging the Academics: An Interdisciplinary Approach
Toward an Understanding of “Continuity, Change, and the Culture of
Fear”
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Interviews with Global Leaders in Policing, Courts, and
Prisons
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Making Sense of Adolescent to Parent Violence:
International Perspectives
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Sexed and Gendered Pathways to Offending and Recidivism
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Gangs in America's Communities
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Teaching Research Methods and Statistics
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Division of International Criminology Business Meeting (Open to All
Participants)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
Vulnerability to Victimization Among the Elderly and Disabled
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Performance Measurement and Evaluation
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Miscarriages of Justice: Social Psychological Theory and Wrongful
Convictions
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Working the Joint: Issues Involving Correctional Staff
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Ideas for Recycling/Greener Efforts at the ASC Meetings
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
The 40th Anniversary of the Criminalization Hypothesis: Reflections on
Criminal Justice and Mental Illness Interface
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
56
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
11:00 am
Prison Community Learning Experiences of Undergraduate Students:
Inside-Out Prison Exchange and Alternatives to Violence
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Pretrial Risk Assessment: Status, Issues, and Opportunities for
Improvement
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Translational Tools to Implement Evidence-Based Practices (EBPs)
Clark 7, 7th Floor
State Strategies and (In)Capacity for Justice and Social Control
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Studies on the Problem of Corruption
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
International Perspectives on Victimization
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Thinking Critically about the "Peer Effect": Measurement and Selection
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Beyond Ruth Kornhauser’s Social Sources Of Delinquency: Challenging
Criminological Theory
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Association of Doctoral Programs of Criminology & Criminal Justice
Business Meeting (ADPCCJ)
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
ASC Policy Committee Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Self-Perception, Identity Transformation, and Desistance
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Models of Neighborhood Change and Crime
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women II
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Understanding Racial and Ethnic Disparity in the Probation Revocation
Process
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Law Enforcement Activities and Trust in Police
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Varieties of Police Behavior in the Modern World
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Self-Control Theory Across the Life Course
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Lethal Violence: Focus on Patterns and Context
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Organized Crime: Theory, History, and Methods
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
The Gendered Nature of Intimate Partner Violence: Male Perpetration
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
State and Local Perspectives of Trafficking in Persons
Price Room, 5th Floor
The Impact of Race on Police Use of Force: Lessons from Empirical
Research
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Qualitative Inquiry and the Future of Criminology
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Crime and Place: Target Locations
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Peripheral Biological Correlates of Antisocial Behavior and Psychopathic
Traits
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
The Gendered and Racialized Delinquency and Juvenile Justice
Experiences of At-Risk Youth
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Education Facilities and Crime Prevention Policy
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
57
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
11:00 am
12:30 pm
Fostering Positive Youth Development: Reframing the Aims of Juvenile
Justice
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Self-Control Theory and Crime/Delinquency
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
New Approaches to Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
New Developments in Policing and Security Service Delivery and
Networks
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Dutch Study Group on the Transition from Juvenile
Delinquency into Adult Crime
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Women in Prison in England and Wales and South Korea
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Gang Talk in the State of Unreason
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Gender Dynamics and Responding to the Challenging or
Resistant Student
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Gender and Drugs II
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Invisible Men: Mass Incarceration and the Myth of
Black Progress
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Longitudinal Patterns in Gang Involvement, Gang Persistence, and Gang
Violence at Individual- and Aggregate-Levels of Analysis
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Division of International Criminology Awards Presentation and Reception Adams Room, 6th Floor
(Open to All Participants)
Marital Status and Victimization
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Policing High-Activity Crime Places
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Results from the National Police Research Platform Longitudinal Studies
of New Recruits and Supervisors
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Prosecutors and Defense Attorneys
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
United Nations Panel II: Democratic Policing and Human Rights - Models Chicago Room, 5th Floor
and Measurement
International Perspectives on Perceptions of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
The National Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program: Research and Ethics
Clark 5, 7th Floor
New Perspectives on Children of Incarcerated Parents
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice Issues in Armenia, Honduras, Europe and the United
States
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Terrorist, Drug, and Smuggling Organizations
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Community Perceptions of Intimate Partner Abuse among High School
Students
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Special Populations in Correctional Institutions
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Crime and Justice in America, 1975-2025: Punishment and Prevention
Empire Room, Lobby Level
58
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
12:30 pm
Methodological Issues in Biosocial Research
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
New Thoughts on Culture, Norms and Violence
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
The Collateral Consequences of Incarceration II
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Mentoring
Research Studies and Findings
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Historical Dynamics of the U.S. Criminal Justice System
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Indigenous Peoples and the Problem of Criminology
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Social Control Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Sex Offenders: Patterns of Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Psychological and Organizational Causes of White-Collar Offending
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
The Scientific Advisory Committee of the NSCR (Closed session)
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence among Same-Sex Couples
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Division on People of Color and Crime Luncheon & Symposium
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
Punishment and Society: The Political Variable, Comparatively
(Organized by the Journal "Punishment and Society")
Price Room, 5th Floor
Social Network Analysis and Criminal Organizations
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
The International Control of Money Laundering
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Crime and Place: Advanced Modeling of Crime and Place
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Consequences of Childhood Maltreatment
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Intragenerational and Intergenerational Similarity in Offending
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Responding to Terrorism and Other Dissenting Behavior
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Effects of the Communities That Care Prevention System on Adolescent
Drug Use, Delinquency, and Violence: Results from a Community
Randomized Trial
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Experimental Criminology: The Sociology of Knowledge Generation The People and Agencies Behind Experimental and Quasi-Experimental
Research in Policing (Organized by the Division of Experimental
Criminology)
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
The Utility of NIBRS for Violence Research
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Individual-Level Predictors of Prisoner Reentry
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Young Drug Users II
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Injustice before Trial: Reviewing the Early Decisions During Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
the Formal Criminal Justice Process and the Impact They May Have on
Criminal Defendants
Roundtable: Hearing the Voices of Imprisoned Women
59
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
12:30 pm
2:00 pm
Roundtable: Intimate Partner Violence
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Medical Marijuana and the Criminal Justice System
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Rutgers University Alumni Association Luncheon
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
Mental Disorder and Offending
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Criminologists without Borders (Open to All)
Adams Room, 6th Floor
College Students as Bystanders in Preventing and Responding to Crimes
Against Women on College Campuses
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Legitimacy and Procedural Justice: Its Meaning and Consequences
Across Individuals and Communities
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Wrongful Convictions and the Reliability of Eyewitness Identification
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Plea Bargaining, Juror Decision Making and Post-Conviction Supervision
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: Meet the Editors Part II - Current Issues and
Directions
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Race, Immigration, and Fear of Crime
Clark 3, 7th Floor
New Directions in Gang Composition Research
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Prisoner Reentry for Women III
Clark 7, 7th Floor
ASC Business Meeting
Clark 8, 7th Floor
Occupy Criminology
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Toward A Unified Criminology: Integrating
Assumptions About Crime, People, and Society
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Victimization Across Sexual Contexts
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
James F. Short, Jr.: A Tribute
Empire Room, Lobby Level
National White Collar Crime Center Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Division on Critical Criminology Journal Editorial Board Meeting
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
New Approaches in Biosocial Criminology
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
The Spatial Context of Victimization
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Reducing Racial Disparities in Juvenile Justice Systems
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Jury Decision Making in Death Penalty Cases
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Trafficking in Persons for Labor Exploitation in the United States
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Exploring Juvenile Justice Issues through a Community Lens
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Social Learning Theory and Crime/Deviance
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Strategies for Managing Sexual Offenders
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Victims, Equity, and Justice in Environmental Crimes
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
60
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
2:00 pm
Critical Perspectives on Justice
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Variations in Incarceration among Nation-States
Price Room, 5th Floor
The Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Research
Resources: Opportunities for Funding, Publication, and Data
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
The Unintended Consequences of Social Mix: Implications for Social
Networks, Collective Efficacy, Crime and Victimization
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Using Data from the Pathways to Desistance Study
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Neighborhood Contextual Influences on Substance Use and Victimization: Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Findings from the Project on Human Development in Chicago
Neighborhoods
Quasi-Experimental Methods in Policing and Crime
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
International Research on Drug Use, Dealing, and Control II
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Crime and Place: Formal and Informal Guardianship
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
How can Violence be Reduced at a Global Scale?
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Experimental Research in Criminology
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
The Impact of New York State’s Rockefeller Drug Law Reform
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
The Role of Interpersonal Behavior in Diverse Policing Contexts
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Roundtable: Current Issues in Federal Sentencing: Fast-Track Programs
for Immigration Offense
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Homicide and Major Crime Investigation: New Insights and
Future Challenges
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Juvenile Justice and Delinquency I
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Linear Transformations and Their Adaptability into Criminal
Justice Model Building
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Race and Justice: Wrongful Convictions of African Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
American Men (Organized by the Division on People of Color and Crime)
3:30 pm
Evidence-Based Crime Policy III
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Firearms Availability, Access, and Carrying
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
New Findings and Explanations for Victimization among
Hispanics/Latinos
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Organizational Influences and Outcomes
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Contemporary Approaches to Latin@ Criminology II
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Characteristics of the Courtroom Workgroup and Case Outcomes
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Students Meet Scholars: Gender and Crime
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Public Perceptions of Sex Crimes
Clark 3, 7th Floor
61
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
3:30 pm
Author Meets Critics: Routledge Handbook of Critical Criminology
(Organized by the Division on Critical Criminology)
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Management Issues in Correctional Institutions
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Zombie Criminology: Can a Nation-Centric Discipline Survive a
Globalized World Context?
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Motorcycle Outlaws? Biker Identities, Narratives and Consumption
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
The American Prison: Imagining a Different Future II
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Responding to Sexual Assault
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Critical Explorations in Contemporary Penalty
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Proposed Division of Developmental and Life-Course Criminology:
Organizational Meeting
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Reentry, Recidivism, and Desistance: Exploring Mechanisms
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Studies of Crime in Non-metropolitan Areas and Schools
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Serious Juvenile Offenders, Life Imprisonment, and the Death Penalty
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
News Media Coverage of Homicide
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Spatial Analysis of Violence and Alcohol Outlets
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Social Context and Explanations of Delinquency
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Substance Use and Criminological Theory
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Violence: Assessing Risk among Incarcerated Populations and Pathways
to Desistence
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Regulatory and Penal Responses to Financial Crimes
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
ASC Publications Meeting
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Assault, and Pregnancy
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Spatial Criminology in China
Price Room, 5th Floor
GPS Monitoring Technologies and Domestic Violence: An Evaluation
Study
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Sentencing Juveniles in Adult Court: Considerations and Consequences
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
The Interplay of Activity Fields, Routine Activities, and Risky Situations
on Crime and Violence
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Understanding Terrorist Behavior
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Guns, Gangs, and Crime Policy
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Traditional Organized Crime in the Modern World II
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
The Triple Bottom Line: People, Planet, and Profit in Corrections
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Technology and Criminal Justice Education
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
62
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
3:30 pm
Roundtable: International/Comparative Crime
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Integrating Songwriting, Music, and Social Justice
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Juvenile Justice and Delinquency II
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Private and Public Reactions to Minorities and Their Crimes
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Mentoring Undergraduates in Research and Scholarship
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Social Class, Economic Inequality, and Crime
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
The Unique Profiles of Gang Members
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Issues of ACCCJ
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
5:00 pm
ASC Presidential Justice Award and Presidential Address
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
6:00 pm
ASC Presidential Reception
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
7:00 pm
Florida State University Reception
Adams Room, 6th Floor
University of Maryland, College Park Reception
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Doctorate in Cultural and Global Criminology (the DCGC,a European
consortium led by the University of Kent) Reception
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Arizona State University Reception
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
University of Cincinnati Reception
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Georgia State University Reception
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
American University Reception
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Indiana University, Bloomington Reception
Harold Washington Suite 9150
Rutgers University Reception
Honore Ballroom, Lobby
Level
University of Massachusetts Lowell Reception
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Korean Institute of Criminology Reception
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
University of New Haven Reception
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Pennsylvania State University Reception
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
University of California, Irvine Reception
Price Room, 5th Floor
Simon Fraser University Reception
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Northeastern University Reception
Salon 10, 3rd floor
John Jay College of Criminal Justice Reception
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
University of Pennsylvania Reception
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
University of Cambridge Reception
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Michigan State University Reception
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
University at Albany, SUNY Reception
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
63
PROGRAM SUMMARY
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
7:00 pm
Illinois State University Reception
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
George Mason University Reception
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Griffith University Reception
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
9:00 pm
Minority Fellowship Dance Featuring The Hot Spots
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
10:00 pm
Minority Fellowship Dance Featuring Matthew Skoller Blue's Band
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30 am
Patterns of Teen Dating Violence: Victimization and Perpetration
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Police Styles, Experiences, and Applications
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Problem Solving Courts
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
The Future of Capital Punishment in the United States
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: The Future of Batterer Programs: Reassessing
Evidence-Based Practice
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Enablers of Organized Crime
Clark 1, 7th Floor
Historical Trends in Punishment and Rehabilitation
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Parents in Correctional Institutions
Clark 3, 7th Floor
The Los Angeles Gang Reduction and Youth Development Program:
Evaluation at Year Three
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Why We Do What We Do: A Review of the SNAP® Approach from
Policy to Practice
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Prison Issues and Culture in Media and Social Debate
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Ontological Criminology
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
School-Based Responses to Victimization and Offending
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Surviving Prison: Quantitative and Qualitative Approaches
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Psychological Approaches to Crime
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Understanding National and International Crime Trends
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Property Crime and Situational Prevention
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Public Perceptions of Guilt and Wrongful Convictions
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Testing Self-Control Theory: From Infancy to Middle Childhood to
Adolescence
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Evaluation of Strategies to Address Sex Offending
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Stealing Science: Research Misconduct and the Misuse of Scholarly
Work
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Cultural Criminology: New Directions
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Cyber Crime: Decisions and Routine
Price Room, 5th Floor
64
PROGRAM SUMMARY
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
8:30 am
Roundtable: Questioning Context: Challenges, Strategies, and
Recommendations for Faculty Teaching an Introduction to Criminal
Justice Course
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: What Does This Have to Do with Being a Police Officer?
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Convincing Students that Social Science and Criminology Are Relevant to
“The Job”
10:00 am
Roundtable: What Role Can Nonprofit Organisations Play in Prisoner
Reentry? Exploring International Opportunities and Challenges
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Why Are Nigerian Nurses Vulnerable to Deadly Intimate
Partner Violence?
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Wrongful Convictions: Possible Solutions
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Author Meets Critics: Life After Death Row: Exonerees' Search for
Community and Identity
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Women's Offenses and Victimization: Examining International Contexts
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
The Effects of Contextual and Organizational Factors on Prisoner Reentry
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
The Link between Victimization and Offending
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Policing Gangs: Prospects and Problems
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Testing Forensic Evidence in Sexual Assault Crimes: Research in Houston Burnham 2, 7th Floor
to Improve Outcomes for Victims and the Justice System
Pretrial Decisions in State, Federal and Non-U.S. Courts
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Professional Development: Developing the Next Generation of Scholars NIJs Graduate Research Fellowship Program
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Mafia Investments
Clark 10, 7th Floor
What Works in Community Corrections
Clark 3, 7th Floor
The Efficacy of Juvenile Justice Interventions
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Issues Related to Visitation and Contact with Family in Correctional
Facilities
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Trafficking in Art and Antiquities
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Environmental Criminology
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Patterns of Violence Against Women in Alaska: Estimates, Correlates,
and Batterer Interventions
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
The Politics of Punishment and Correction
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Psychological Criminology
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Understanding Subculture
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Experimental Criminology: An Experimental Evaluation of Supervision
Strategies for High Risk Probationers in Philadelphia (Organized by the
Division of Experimental Criminology)
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
65
PROGRAM SUMMARY
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
10:00 am
Emerging Issues in Crime Policy: Unionization, Collaboration, and
Technology
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Perceptions of Punitiveness
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Youth (In)justice: Reports from the Front
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
The Future of Self-Control
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Women and Violence: Exploring Context and Typologies
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Strategic Countermeasures for Anti-Counterfeiting, Intellectual Property
Rights, and Product Fraud: Enabling the Shift to Prevention
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Measuring Gender and Crime
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Crime Patterns and Routine Variation
Price Room, 5th Floor
Roundtable: United Nations Panel: Criminology at the UN
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Measuring Human Trafficking: Examples in
Operationalization and Instrumentation
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Teaching Critical Criminology: Teaching Specific Content
Areas Critically
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Roundtable: Teaching Sensitive Topics: Intimate Partner Abuse, Rape,
and Victim Blaming
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Roundtable: The Emergence of Smart Policing
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Roundtable: The Gains and Challenges of Penal Abolition: A Roundtable
Discussion
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Roundtable: The Need for Creating Therapeutic Communities within
South African Correctional Facilities
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
The Gendering of Offending
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author Meets Critics: The Black Child-Savers: Racial Democracy and
Juvenile Justice (Organized by the Division on People of Color and
Crime)
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Transformations in Punishment and Society
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
11:30 am
ASC Closing Brunch
Empire Room, Lobby Level
12:00 pm
ASC Executive Board Meeting
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
66
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13
MEETING
SESSION 001: CAMPBELL COLLABORATION CRIME AND JUSTICE GROUP MEETING
Tuesday, November 13 - 8:00 am to 5:00 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
WORKSHOP
SESSION 002: DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY WORKSHOP: PRACTICAL
SOLUTIONS FOR ADMINISTERING MULTI-SITE RANDOMIZED TRIALS
Tuesday, November 13 - 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Instructors:
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
Doris Layton MacKenzie, Pennsylvania State University
John Roman, The Urban Institute
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
WORKSHOP
SESSION 003: WORKSHOP: GIS, MAPPING, AND SPATIAL MODELING
Tuesday, November 13 - 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Instructor:
Robert Nash Parker, University of California
WORKSHOP
SESSION 004: WORKSHOP: ANALYZING THE PROJECT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IN
CHICAGO NEIGHBORHOODS
Tuesday, November 13 - 1:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Instructors:
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Emily Wright, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Gregory Zimmerman, Northeastern University
Participants
Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University
Brent Phillips, ICPSR at University of Michigan
MEETING
SESSION 005: ASC EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING
Tuesday, November 13 - 3:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
WORKSHOP
SESSION 006: DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME FEMINIST CRIMINOLOGY IN THEORY AND
ACTION WORKSHOP
Tuesday, November 13 - 4:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
67
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 007: LIFE WITH(OUT) THE POSSIBILITY OF PAROLE: AN EXAMINATION OF
PAROLE DECISION MAKING IN CALIFORNIA
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Lee Crayton, Western Carolina University
Life Sentences and Parole Release in California
Debbie Mukamal, Stanford Criminal Justice Center
Life in Prison or Parole Release: Predicting Parole Decision Making in California
Lee Crayton, Western Carolina University
Determining Release: Perspectives of Parole Decision-Makers
Kathryne M. Young, Stanford University
Reentry Outcomes for California Lifers
Lee Seale, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 008: MAKING PROSECUTION FAIRER AND MORE EFFECTIVE
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michael Jacobson, Vera Institute of Justice
Lessons Learned from Using Social Science Findings to Minimize Racial Disparity in Prosecution of Domestic Violence, Resisting
and Obstructing a Police Officer, and Prostitution Cases
Whitney Tymas, Vera Institute of Justice
A Review of Preliminary Findings on the Impact of Prosecutorial Decision-Making on Racial Justice in a Large Northeastern Urban
Jurisdiction
Nancy Andiloro, Vera Institute of Justice
Besiki Luka Kutateladze, Vera Institute of Justice
Vincent Lau, Vera Institute of Justice
Prosecutorial Performance Indicators: Why and How DA’s Offices Can Use Empirical Measures to Identify Problems and Improve
Their Overall Performance
Besiki Luka Kutateladze, Vera Institute of Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 009: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES IN REDUCING THE USE OF
SEGREGATION IN U.S. PRISONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Angela Browne, Vera Institute of Justice
Vera’s Segregation Reduction Project: An Innovative Approach to the Use of Segregation in Prison
Angela Browne, Vera Institute of Justice
Use and Outcomes of Segregation
Suzanne Agha, Vera Institute of Justice
68
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Long-Term Segregation in U.S. Prisons
Jim Austin, JFA Institute
Discussant:
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 010: ADVANCING MEDIA SCHOLARSHIP: THEORY, MEASUREMENT, AND THE
ROLE OF CRIME EXPERTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kevin Glenn Buckler, University of Texas at Brownsville
Thinking inside the Box: Hegemonic Crime Ideology and Episodic Thought as Crime News Production Constraints
Nicholas James Chagnon, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Finding the Folk Devil in the 21st Century
Ryan Baker, Kentucky Wesleyan College
Crime Films: Issues of Genre and Sampling
Colleen Kadleck, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Alexander M. Holsinger, University of Missouri - Kansas City
The Ambiguous Role of the Criminologist as Crime Expert
Ineke Haen Marshall, Northeastern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 011: CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO LATIN@ CRIMINOLOGY I
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Maria B. Velez, University of New Mexico
A View of the Future of Immigration Using the Republican Presidential Debates
Myrna Cintron, Prairie View A&M University
Karissa Rodriguez, Prairie View A&M University
Mexico and United States Historical Migration Flows and Impact on Crime
Ed A. Munoz, University of Wyoming
Greg S. Weaver, Auburn University
Martín Echeverría Victoria, Universidad Anáhuac Mayab
Policing Community: On the Uses of Law Enforcement and the Rules of Law to Keep Undocumented Immigrants Insecure
Luis F. Nuno, William Paterson University of New Jersey
Demystifying the “Good Peasant” / Desmitificando al “Jibaro Bueno”
Jose R. Cepeda Borrero, Catedratico Auxiliar Justicia Criminal
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 012: UNDERSTANDING SERVICE NEEDS, TRENDS IN DRUG USE, AND DRUG COSTS
IN ARRESTEE POPULATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Phyllis Newton, National Institute of Justice
69
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Generational Effects of Drug Use Among Arrestees in Chicago
Arthur Lurigio, Loyola University Chicago
Trends in Opiate Use Among Arrestees
Dana Hunt, Abt Associates Inc.
Frequent Arrestees and the Institutional Circuit
Cory Feldman, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Estimating Illicit Retail Drug Price Distributions using ADAM II
Ryan Kling, Abt Associates Inc / University of Massachusetts - Boston
Discussant:
Phyllis Newton, National Institute of Justice
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 013: A TROUBLED MARRIAGE: DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND THE LEGAL SYSTEM
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
James Ptacek, Suffolk University
Author
Leigh Goodmark, University of Baltimore
Critics
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Hillary Potter, University of Colorado - Boulder
Susan L. Miller, University of Delaware
Edward Gondolf, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 014: RESPONDING TO SEXUAL VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jodi Death, Queensland University of Technology
The Characteristics of and Social Reactions to Victims of Spousal Sexual Assault
Meghna Bhat, University of Illinois at Chicago
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Hidden Nature of Sex Trafficking: Trafficking Techniques and Challenges in the Justice System
Andrea Nichols, St. Louis Community College
Erin C. Heil, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
The Characteristics of Chinese Women's Victimization in Sex Offenses
Lening Zhang, Saint Francis University
“They Did Not Believe Me”: Responding to Child Sexual Abuse by Church Personnel in Australia
Jodi Death, Queensland University of Technology
SESSION 015: THE PRIVATIZATION OF POLICE AND POLICE-PRIVATE SECTOR
PARTNERSHIPS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Paul A. Magro, Ball State University
70
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Private Police in Bosnia-Herzegovina: Positive vs. Negative Aspects
Laurence Armand French, University of New Hampshire
Goran Kovacevic, University of Sarajevo
Nedzad Korajlic, University of Sarajevo
Private Security in Canada: Examining Private Responses to Public Threats
John Winterdyk, Mount Royal University
Rick Ruddell, University of Regina
Implementing Police Mobile Broadband: An Operational Evaluation
Jeremy G. Carter, University of North Florida
Eric Grommon, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Nancy Merritt, U.S. Department of Justice
Joseph Heaps, U.S. Department of Justice
The Privatization of Police: Exploring the Potential and the Pitfalls
Paul A. Magro, Ball State University
SESSION 016: ARREST, PROSECUTION AND SENTENCING: POLICIES AND PRACTICES
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Philip M. Stinson, Bowling Green State University
Is Burglary a Violent Crime? Findings from a National Study
Richard F. Culp, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Phillip M. Kopp, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Candace McCoy, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Juvenile Lifers: Findings from a National Survey on Juveniles Serving Life without Parole
Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
Mothers Who Murder? Drug Use and Abuse by Nursing and Pregnant Mothers
Emily Horowitz, St. Francis College
Occupy the Courts: How Activists Negotiate Arrest and Criminal Prosecution
Tammi Arford, Northeastern University
Andrea L. Hill, Northeastern University
SESSION 017: COMMUNITIES AND COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Monica Solinas-Saunders, Indiana University Northwest
Realignment in a California County: The First Year
John Owen, California State University, Fresno
Yoshiko Takahashi, California State University, Fresno
Emma Hughes, California State University, Fresno
Barbara Owen, California State University, Fresno
The Context of Back-End Sentencing: Neighborhood Predictors of Parole Violations and Sanctions
Jonah A. Siegel, University of Michigan
Jeffrey D. Morenoff, University of Michigan
David J. Harding, University of Michigan
The Impact of Prison Deinstitutionalization on Community Treatment Services
Beverly D. Frazier, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Hung-En Sung, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Lior Gideon, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Karla Alfaro, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
71
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Give Peace a Chance: Peacemaking Criminology and Restorative Justice Practices
Lloyd Klein, St. Francis College
SESSION 018: ATTITUDES OF COURT/CORRECTIONAL WORKERS AND CLIENTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Margaret E. Leigey, The College of New Jersey
Two Systems of Accountability Living Under the Same Roof: Staff Member Perspectives on Adult Court Youth in Juvenile
Correctional Facilities
Darin Haerle, University of California, Irvine
Is the Meaning of Procedural Justice Universal? An Examination of Female Inmates
Thomas Baker, Virginia Commonwealth University
Kristin Golden, NJ Department of Law & Public Safety
Karla Dhungana, Florida State University
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
Laura Bedard, Corrections Corporation of America
What Happens When We Don't Agree: A Further Look at Probation Officer Recommendations
Denise Leifker, DeSales University
The Pains of Permanent Imprisonment: Findings from a Sample of Life without Parole Inmates
Margaret E. Leigey, The College of New Jersey
Michael Ryder, The College of New Jersey
SESSION 019: NEUTRALIZATION THEORY AND CRIME/DEVIANCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Wallis E. Adams, Northeastern University
An Application of Techniques of Neutralization Theory to Deviant Behavior
Youngki Woo, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Bike Racing, Neutralization, and the Social Construction of Performance-Enhancing Drug Use
Ophir Sefiha, University of Denver
International Sex Tourism: How Techniques of Neutralization are Utilized on the Web to Facilitate a Global Concern
Wallis E. Adams, Northeastern University
SESSION 020: CROSS-NATIONAL COMPARISONS AND PAROLE DECISION-MAKING
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kristofer Bret Bucklen, PA Dept. of Corrections / University of Maryland
Conceptual Framing of Corrections Staff and Superintendent Recommendations about Parole Release
Brandy L. Blasko, Temple University
Our Prison Systems: A Cross-National Comparison Based on the Existing Data
Jose Becerra-Munoz, University of Malaga
Elisa Garcia-Espana, University of Malaga
Araceli Aguilar Conde, University of Malaga
Procedural Justice and Paroling Decisions: An Investigation of the Impact of Perceived Legitimacy of the Parole Process on Outcomes
Kristofer Bret Bucklen, PA Dept. of Corrections / University of Maryland
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
72
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 021: BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY: GENETICS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Davin Hall, University of Cincinnati
Exploring the Influence of Genetic Risk and Poor Parent-Child Relationships on the Susceptibility to Deviant Peer Influence
John Stogner, Georgia Southern University
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
From Genes to General Strain Theory: How Modern Neuroscience Can Bridge the Explanatory Gap
Richard Evan Niemeyer, University of California, Riverside
Kristopher Proctor, Stanford University
Measures of Genetic Risk for Antisocial Behavior in an Incarcerated Sample
Todd Armstrong, Sam Houston State University
Brian B. Boutwell, Sam Houston State University
On the Resolution of Existential Angst: Phenotypic Plasticity as a Function of Niche Construction
Davin Hall, University of Cincinnati
Lacey Schaefer, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 022: EVALUATING PRISONER REENTRY PROGRAMS I
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mathew Lynch, University of South Florida
A Measure of Success? A Multi-Site Examination of Structure, Goals, and Staff
Marcus Antonio Galeste, Arizona State University
Connie Ireland, California State University, Long Beach
Sonia Munoz-Duran, California State University, Long Beach
An Experimental Evaluation of a Nationally Recognized Offender Reentry Program
David Farabee, University of California, Los Angeles
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
Mentors and Second Chances: An Implementation Evaluation of a Reentry Mentor Program
Danielle McDonald, Northern Kentucky University
Cheryl Lero Jonson, Northern Kentucky University
A New Direction: Evaluating a Prison-Based Reentry Program's Impact on Pre-Release Offending
Mathew Lynch, University of South Florida
Nicholas Branic, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 023: EDUCATING FOR CHANGE: INNOVATIONS IN SCHOOLS AND JUVENILE
FACILITIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Judy L. Estren, AMIkids, Inc.
Engaging Boys in Bystander Education and Gender Violence Prevention
Tara Opsal, Colorado State University
Making a Case for the Introduction of Restorative Justice Practices in Middle Schools in Texas
Sharmaine G. Tapper, Prairie View A&M University
O. Oko Elechi, Prairie View A&M University
The (In)Visibility of Juvenile Justice and Emancipatory Education
Sanna King, University of Hawaii at Manoa
73
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Turning Data into Information: The Use of Ongoing Evaluation to Drive Effective Juvenile Justice Services
Judy L. Estren, AMIkids, Inc.
Kristin Winokur Early, Justice Research Center
Julia Blankenship, Justice Research Center
SESSION 024: ASSASSINATIONS: SOCIO-HISTORICAL ANALYSES
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Frankie Yvonne Bailey, University at Albany, SUNY
A Tale of Two Regicides
Jayne Mooney, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Death to Politics: A Socio-Historical Analysis of Congressional Assassinations and Attempts
Jeanne Subjack, Sam Houston State University
The Actress and the Assassin: Henrietta Irving and John Wilkes Booth in Nineteenth Century Culture
Frankie Yvonne Bailey, University at Albany, SUNY
Discussant:
Manuel Peter Eisner, University of Cambridge
SESSION 025: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON JUVENILE PROTECTION AND WELFARE
POLICIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Hui Huang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Exploring Risk Governance in the Nordic Context: Finnish Juvenile Crime and Child Welfare
Timo Harrikari, University of Helsinki
The Protection Model of Juvenile Delinquency in Portugal: A Study from a Justice Facility
Ana Manuela Faria, University of Porto, Portugal
Josefina Maria Castro, University of Porto, Portugal
Youth Justice: Balancing Risk, Negotiating Delinquency
Elaine Arnull, Bucks New University
Darrell Fox, Yukon Territory and London Met University
Congregate Care and Recidivism: Does Child Welfare System's Response to Returning Delinquent Awards Matter?
Hui Huang, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
SESSION 026: TURNING POINTS IN THE LIFE COURSE: MILITARY, EMPLOYMENT, AND
PARENTING EXPERIENCES
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew VanEseltine, Bowling Green State University
The Military's Role in Desistance
Jessica Craig, University of Texas at Dallas
Coming of Age in the Military Post-9/11: An Examination of Early Life Outcomes for a New Generation of Military Veterans
Philip Mulvey, Arizona State University
Matthew Larson, Arizona State University
Criminal Trajectories of Men with Marginal Labor Market Status: Is There Evidence for the Turning-Point Hypothesis?
Torbjorn Skardhamar, Statistics Norway
Jukka Savolainen, University of Nebraska
74
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Stressors and Rewards in the Parenthood-Crime Relationship
Matthew VanEseltine, Bowling Green State University
April Dawn Holbrook, Bowling Green State University
SESSION 027: THE ROLE OF STRAIN ON CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Cresean Hughes, Florida State University
The Conditioning Effect of Early Strain to Later Strain, Stress Responses and Aggression by Police Officers
Don L. Kurtz, Kansas State University
Egbert Zavala, University of Texas at El Paso
The Impact of Strain and Coping Skills on Treatment Outcomes for Juvenile Offenders
Miriam Sealock, Towson University
Michelle Manasse, Towson University
When Enough Is Enough: The Cumulative Effects of Strain
Cresean Hughes, Florida State University
SESSION 028: CONTROLLING CORPORATE CRIME: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kip Schlegel, Indiana University Bloomington
Corporate Crime: Towards an Efficient Model of Prevention
Nikolaos Theodorakis, University of Cambridge
Retribution as Applied to White-Collar Crime
Wojciech Cebulak, Minot State University
Collecting Fines for Corporate Crimes
Kip Schlegel, Indiana University Bloomington
SESSION 029: INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE AMONG IMMIGRANT POPULATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Arshia U. Zaidi, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
A Study of Domestic Violence against Immigrant Women in South Korea
Younoh Cho, Dongguk University
Barriers to Coping with Intimate Partner Violence for Korean Immigrant Women
Sung-hun Byun, Rutgers University
The Impediments to Justice for Victims of Domestic Violence in Nigeria
Chioma Daisy Onyige-Ebeniro, University of Port Harcourt
Speaking Out: An Exploratory Study of Cross-Cultural Challenges, Occurrences, and Experiences of Elderly South Asian Immigrants
Residing in Canada
Arshia U. Zaidi, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Shahid Alvi, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
SESSION 030: ENTERPRISING CRIMES IN TRANS-NATIONAL CONTEXTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Barbara Ann Stolz, U.S. GAO
An Increased Opportunity for Transnational Crime? An Examination of the Netherlands’ Drug Policy
Sharon A. Melzer, SUNY Plattsburgh
75
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Applying "Bordering" to Cyberspace: An Analysis of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
Amanda Marie Smith, Western Michigan University
Human Trafficking, Network Ties, and Migration: A Comparative Analysis of the United States and Britain, 2007 to 2010
Erin Denton, McGill University
Is Canada Falling Short of Obligations to Combat Human Trafficking? Compliance with the Palermo Protocol
Christie Holden, University of Ottawa
SESSION 031: PATTERNS AND TRENDS IN COMPUTER CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ingrid Norris, Utica College
Cybercrime: Where is it Hidden?
Marianne Junger, University of Twente
Margo Karemaker, Saxion Hogeschool
Pieter Hartel, University of Twente
Electronic Piracy and Non-Digital Theft: Relative Explanations of College Students’ Attitudes and Behaviors
Mary Brewster, West Chester University
Joseph Moloney, West Chester University
Laptop Theft: How Easy is it?
Trajce Dimkov, Deloitte
Marianne Junger, University of Twente
Wolter Pieters, Delft University of Technology
Pieter Hartel, University of Twente
Identity Theft Patterns in Florida: An Analysis Using Suspect, Victim, and Witness Data
Ingrid Norris, Utica College
Jennifer Trost, Utica College
Shanna Van Slyke, Utica College
SESSION 032: SOCIAL CONTROL, PRIVACY, AND POLICY
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Donald Rebovich, Utica College
Homelessness and Controlling Space: The Criminalization of Vagrancy in Virginia
Lindsey Upton, Old Dominion University
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
Medical Marijuana and Social Control: Escaping Criminalization and Embracing Medicalization
Patrick Kevin O'Brien, University of Colorado - Boulder
Perceptions of Privacy in Public Environs
Jill Joline Myers, Western Illinois University
Kimberly D. Dodson, Western Illinois University
Kyla M. Keefauver, Western Illinois University
Protecting Personal Health Care Information from Criminal Breaches
Donald Rebovich, Utica College
SESSION 033: ADVANCES IN QUALITATIVE METHODS IN CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Steven Downing, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
76
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Comparative Criminology and the Delphi Method
Gordon Hughes, Cardiff University
Adam Edwards, Cardiff University
Inter-Rater Reliability among Qualitative Criminologists: An Assessment and Implications
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
Henk Elffers, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Space, Time, and Reflexive Interviewing: Implications for Qualitative Criminology
Steven Downing, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Katherine Polzer, Texas Christian University
Kristine Levan, Plymouth State University
SESSION 034: PROSECUTION AND SENTENCING: A CROSS-NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Roger Isaac Roots, Fair Procedure Initiative
Impact of the Lay Judge System on the Criminal Justice Policy for Sex Crimes in Japan
Mari Hirayama, Hakuoh University
Judicial Practice of Sentencing Multiple Offenders
Natalia Vibla, University of Cambridge
Social Circumstances of the Offender as Sentencing Determinants in the Netherlands
Sigrid G.C. van Wingerden, Leiden University
Johan van Wilsem, Leiden University
The Role of Discretion: Correlations between Drug Crime and the Prosecution of Drug Offenses in Taiwan
Ming-Li Hsieh, Washington State University
SESSION 035: APPLYING THEORY TO THE STUDY OF THE POLICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
Integrating Policing Theory with Legal Theory
Jerry Joplin, Guilford College
Exploring the Applicability of Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory to Intelligence-Led Problem Oriented Policing
Denise D. Nation, Winston-Salem State University
A Sociological Imagination: Simon Holdaway, Pioneer of Police Research
Richard Heslop, West Yorkshire Police, England / University of Cincinnati
Officers' Job Satisfaction in South Korea: A Test of Expectancy Motivation Theory
Wook Kang, University of Central Oklahoma
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
SESSION 036: ROUNDTABLE: BRICK TO CLICK: SCALING THE ADDITION OF AN ONLINE
PROGRAM IN A TRADITIONAL FACE TO FACE ENVIRONMENT
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
David A. Jenks, University of West Georgia
Discussants:
Lee Michael Johnson, University of West Georgia
John Randolph Fuller, University of West Georgia
Richard Lemke, University of West Georgia
77
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 037: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION FOR THE RULE OF LAW IN
THE WEBINAR AGE: LESSONS LEARNED AND THE WAY AHEAD
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mangai Natarajan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Discussants:
Rosemary Barberet, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Chris Andreopoulos, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Phil Reichel, University of Northern Colorado
Aaron Fichtelberg, University of Delaware
Emil W. Plywaczewski, University of Bialystok, Poland
Karin Bruckmueller, University of Vienna
SESSION 038: ROUNDTABLE: CSI: MEDIA, JURIES, AND BURDEN OF PROOF
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Chair:
Evaristus Obinyan, Clark Atlanta University
Discussants:
Patrick Ibe, Albany State University
Jovita Esechie, Texas Southern University
Hamin Shabazz, Stevenson University
Dorothy Sule, University of North Carolina, Elizabethcity
Ihekwoaba Declan Onwudiwe, Texas Southern University
SESSION 039: DRUG AND ALCOHOL USE AMONG STUDENTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
Social Construction of the 'Binge Drinker' among College Students
Michael A. Johnson, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Samantha Clinkinbeard, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Policing Alcohol- and Drug-Related Crimes on Campus
Andrea Allen, University of South Carolina
Prescription Drug Misuse: A Theoretical Analysis of the Growing College Phenomenon
William Christopher Watkins, West Virginia Wesleyan College
Trends in Drug Use by United States High School Seniors: An Analysis of Monitoring the Future, 1976-2010
Chiung-Fang Hsu, Florida State University
Steven Michael Lemmey, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 040: BJS AND THE USE OF ADMINISTRATIVE DATA ON CRIME: WHAT WE ARE
LEARNING FROM NIBRS?
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Male Victims of Sexual Assault: What Do We Know About Them? Characteristics of Violent Sexual Assaults Involving Male Victims
Reported to Law Enforcement, 2006-2009
Alexia Cooper, Bureau of Justice Statistics
78
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Cops are Victims, Too! The Characteristics of Reported Incidents of Violence against Law Enforcement Officers in 12 States, 20062009
Ron Malega, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Alexia Cooper, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Arson Incidents Reported to Law Enforcement: Who is Starting the Fires and How Often Do the Cops Catch Them?
Ramona Rantala, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Fraud and the Elderly: Examining the Likelihood of Arrest in Cases of Fraud against the Elderly Reported to Law Enforcement, 20062009
Howard Snyder, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Discussant:
Howard Snyder, Bureau of Justice Statistics
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 041: BUILDING AND ENHANCING POLICE AGENCY CAPACITY FOR RESEARCH
AND ANALYSIS: PROSPECTS AND APPROACHES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jac Charlier, TASC
Is My Work Valued? Insights into the Perceived Value of Research and Planning Contributions to Organizational Goals
Brenda Bond, Suffolk University
Enhancing Police Utilization of Research through Smart Policing
Michael D. White, Arizona State University
Research, Analysis, and Planning Capacities in American Police Departments: Results of a Recent PERF Survey
Vivian Chu, CNA
Promoting Police Capacity for Research and Planning
Craig Fraser, Police Executive Research Forum
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 042: CONTROVERSIES IN POLICING
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Marilyn Corsianos, Eastern Michigan University
Police Corruption, Hegemonic Masculinity and Gendered Risks
Marilyn Corsianos, Eastern Michigan University
The Police and Facebook
Seyed Mirmajlessi, Eastern Michigan University
A Target of Friendly Fire: The Lived Experiences of Lesbian Police Officers
Carrie Buist, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Varieties of French Policing: What Controversies in French Policing Can Tell Us about State Power Today
Kevin Karpiak, Eastern Michigan University
79
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 043: POLICING BY THE NUMBERS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Meghan E. Hollis, Northeastern University
Defining Crime: How Police Processing of Crime Influences Crime Outcomes Used in Research
Meghan E. Hollis, Northeastern University
New Modes of Accountability: A Dialectical Analysis
Peter K. Manning, Northeastern University
The Crime Numbers Game: Management by Manipulation
Eli Silverman, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
John Eterno, Police Practice & Research: An International Journal
Policing by Number and the Increasing Legibility of Space: An Empirical Assessment of Canadian Police Services Engagement in
Crime and Intelligence Analysis
Carrie B. Sanders, Wilfrid Laurier University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 044: NEIGHBORHOODS, SPACE, NETWORKS AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University
Perceptions of Crime, Disorder, and Routine Activity Space Segregation: A Multilevel Network Approach
Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University
Brian Soller, Ohio State University
Aubrey L. Jackson, Ohio State University
Dynamic Network Models of Male Sex Worker/Client Interactions
Brian Soller, Ohio State University
Trevon D. Logan, Ohio State University
Chih-Sheng Hsieh, Ohio State University
The Role of Neighborhood and Family Context in Youth Co-Offending
David R. Schaefer, Arizona State University
Nancy Rodriguez, Arizona State University
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
Immigrant Spatial Mobility, Community Networks, Crime, and the Paradox of Assimilation
Corina Graif, University of Michigan
Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 045: CONFRONTING THE CRISES IN CRIMINOLOGY: HISTORY, KNOWLEDGE, AND
LEGACY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Johannes Wheeldon, Washington State University
Crises in Criminology? A Historical Review and Model of Theory Growth
Jon Heidt, Simon Fraser University
80
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Conjectures and Refutations: The Accumulation of Criminological Knowledge
Brendan Dooley, University of Maryland
Legacy and Longing: Criminological Education, Understanding, and Modesty
Johannes Wheeldon, Washington State University
Discussant:
Robert Bursik, University of Missouri - St. Louis
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 046: NOVEL INTEGRATION OF COMMUNICATION AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
THEORY: EFFECTIVE PROBATION/PAROLE SUPERVISION OF DRUG-INVOLVED WOMEN
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
Overview of the Research and Theory
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
What Works and What Doesn’t Work in Recruiting and Retaining an Offender Sample for Longitudinal Research
Miriam Northcutt-Bohmert, Michigan State University
Memorable Messages for Women on Probation and Parole
Sandi W. Smith, Michigan State University
Jennifer Cornacchione, Michigan State University
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
Women Offenders’ Accounts of the Strategies for Avoiding Crime and Victimization in Bad Neighborhoods
Jennifer Cobbina, Michigan State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 047: PUBLIC HEALTH AND JUSTICE: REDUCING RISKS AND THREATS TO HEALTH
OF CRIMINAL OFFENDERS, THEIR VICTIMS, AND THEIR COMMUNITIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Jeff Mellow, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
When Immigration Control Becomes a Criminal Justice and Public Health Risk: Victimization and Mental Health among
Undocumented Migrant Workers
Hung-En Sung, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Public Health and Criminal Justice/Criminology Perspectives on Intentional Burns on Women
Mangai Natarajan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Health Challenges of Recently Released Inmates and Implications for Public Health Policy
Sung-suk Violet Yu, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Influence of Faith-Based Mentoring and Access to Health and Secular Reintegrative Services on Health Disparity
Frank S. Pezzella, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 048: SOLD INTO EXTINCTION: THE GLOBAL TRADE IN ENDANGERED SPECIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Graeme Newman, University at Albany, SUNY
81
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Author
Jacqueline L. Schneider, Illinois State University
Critics
Andrew Lemieux, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Stephen F. Pires, Florida International University
William Moreto, Rutgers University
Greg Warchol, Northern Michigan University
Melanie Wellsmith, University of Huddersfield
Discussant:
Rosemary Barberet, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 049: AFTER THE CRIME: THE POWER OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE DIALOGUES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
James Ptacek, Suffolk University
Author
Susan L. Miller, University of Delaware
Critics
Leigh Goodmark, University of Baltimore
Kimberly Cook, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Susan T. Krumholz, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Gail Garfield, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 050: ARRESTED JUSTICE: BLACK WOMEN, VIOLENCE, AND AMERICA'S PRISON
NATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author
Beth E. Richie, University of Illinois at Chicago
Critics
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Lisa Frohmann, University of Illinois at Chicago
Hillary Potter, University of Colorado - Boulder
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 051: DETAINED WITHOUT CAUSE: MUSLIMS' STORIES OF DETENTION AND
DEPORTATION IN AMERICA AFTER 9/11
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Author
Irum Shiekh, University of California, Riverside
Critics
Arvind Verma, Indiana University Bloomington
Farrukh Hakeem, Shaw University
82
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 052: DRUG COURT OUTCOMES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Julie Marie Baldwin, University of Florida
A Preliminary Investigation of the Webb County Drug Court
Kelly Frailing, Texas A&M International University
Diana L. Carreon, Texas A&M International University
A Social Worker's Role in Drug Court
Melinda Roberts York, University of Southern Indiana
Assessing the Effectiveness of an Adult Drug Court with a More Plausible Comparison Group
Sarah Browning, North Dakota State University
Melinda Fangman, North Dakota State University
Exploring Non-Traditional Moderators of Success in Drug Court: Physical and Personal Support
Jacqueline Gay van Wormer, Washington State University
Zachary Hamilton, Washington State University
SESSION 053: EXTRALEGAL FACTORS AND SENTENCING OUTCOMES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ashley Nellis, The Sentencing Project
"What about the Kids?" The Effect of Gender, Race and Childcare Responsibilities on Sentencing Outcomes
Christine Bond, Queensland University of Technology
Samantha Jeffries, Queensland University of Technology
Labeling Convicted Felons: Is There a Young Black or Hispanic Male Penalty?
Stephanie Bontrager Ryon, The Justice Research Center
Ted Chiricos, Florida State University
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Kelle Barrick, RTI International
Mapping the Relationship between Offender Characteristics, Sentences, and Outcomes
Julia Laskorunsky, Pennsylvania State University
Matthew DeMichele, Pennsylvania State University
Reexamining Race and Ethnicity Effects on Sentencing: A Propensity Score Matching Approach
Travis Franklin, Sam Houston State University
Are Female Offenders Treated More Leniently by Judges?
Natalie Goulette, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 054: INMATE HEALTH-RELATED ISSUES IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michele Pich, Temple University
A Profile of Inmate Health Behavior at Louisiana State Penitentiary
Geraldine None Doucet, Southern University at New Orleans
Dying Inside: The Current State of the Literature on End of Life Care in Prison
Meghan A. Novisky, Kent State University
Governing Male Sexuality: Using Queer Theory to Analyze Male Prison Sex
M. Kristen Hefner, University of Delaware
83
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Inmate Perceptions of HIV Services
Michele Pich, Temple University
Steven Belenko, Temple University
Michael Copenhaver, University of Connecticut
Daniel O'Connell, University of Delaware
Frank S. Pearson, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.
Carrie Beth Oser, University of Kentucky
Matthew Hiller, Temple University
Jamieson Duvall, University of Kentucky
SESSION 055: CAPITAL PUNISHMENT IN THE UNITED STATES AND ABROAD
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kyle Burgason, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Does Injustice Matter? Anti-Death Penalty Movements in Japan and the U.S.
Mari Kita, University of Hawaii at Manoa
The Intersection of Victim Race and Gender in Death Penalty Cases
Alicia A. Girgenti, Northeastern University
Due Process and Death Penalty Reforms in China: China's March towards Modernization of Criminal Justice
Shahid M. Shahidullah, Elizabeth City State University
Sherri DioGuardi, Elizabeth City State University
The Death Penalty: A Multi-Level Analysis of Public Opinion
Kyle Burgason, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Lynn Pazzani, Delta State University
SESSION 056: CONVICT CRIMINOLOGY: PERSPECTIVES ON THE PRISON EXPERIENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephen C. Richards, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
"Who You Run with and Who You Don't Run with": Navigating the Carceral Social Order
Patrick Lopez-Aguado, University of California, Santa Barbara
A Tale of Two Inmates: A Reentry Story about the Impacts of Ethnicity and Social Class
Richard Hendricksen, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh / Convict Criminology
Alan Mobley, San Diego State University / Convict Criminology
The First Dime and Nickel of Convict Criminology
Stephen C. Richards, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
Michael Lenza, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
SESSION 057: THE COMMUNITY CONTEXT OF CRIME AND SOCIAL PROBLEMS: STUDIES
FROM AROUND THE WORLD
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sue-Ming Yang, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
Community Concentrated Disadvantage, Informal Social Control and Adolescent Self-Reported and Official Crime Rates
Margret Valdimarsdottir, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Jon Gunnar Bernburg, University of Iceland
Community-Level Influences on Social Bonds and Delinquency in South Korea
Jina Lee, Michigan State University
Juyoung Song, University of West Georgia
Bryce Elling Peterson, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Daiwon Lee, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
84
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Social Capital: An Explanatory Factor of Violent Crimes in Turkey
Fatih Irmak, Turkish National Police
Does Context Matter? A Multivariate Analysis of Neighborhood Effects on Social Pathologies in Canada
Stephanie E. Dawson, Simon Fraser University
Garth Davies, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 058: COLLECTIVE FORMS OF VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Lynn Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
Collective Victimization: A Province of Victimology Research?
Simeon Sungi, Central Washington University
Dynamics of Suffering: Centering Gender in Genocide
Kristin Bell, Northeastern University
Volunteerism or Victimization: Framing a Conspiracy in International Development
Jaclyn T. San Antonio, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Contamination in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas
Lynn Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
S. George Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
SESSION 059: EMERGING ISSUES IN CRIME POLICY: BENEVOLENCE AND BYSTANDER
BEHAVIOR
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sarah Cope Nicksa, Widener University
From Revenge to Restoration: Restorative Justice in the Context of Street Group Violence and Riots
Tania Arvanitidis, Simon Fraser University
Religiosity, Family Process, and Adolescent Deviance: The Role of Religion Revisited
Linda Shuo Zhao, Temple University
Justin C. Medina, Temple University
Prioritization and Bystander Behavior
Mary Brewster, West Chester University
Jane M. Tucker, West Chester University
Brett Snyder, West Chester University
The Relationship between Gender and Bystander Willingness to Intervene in a Hypothetical Sexual Assault
Sarah Cope Nicksa, Widener University
SESSION 060: TURNING POINTS AND LABELING PROCESSES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Carol Gregory, Baldwin Wallace University
The Effects of the Label of Mental Illness on Offending through the Life Course
Anne Lee, Old Dominion University
Formal v. Informal Labeling: Differential Effects in Subsequent Crime and Delinquency
Clyde LeMark Lemon, Florida State University
The Fourth Grade Failure Syndrome: Investigating Black Boys' Early School Bonds, Turning Points, and Delinquent Life Trajectories
Darren Beneby, Prairie View A&M University
85
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Homicide, Suicide and Accidental Death: Applying Lifecourse Theory to Victimization
Carol Gregory, Baldwin Wallace University
Mary Frame, Baldwin Wallace University
SESSION 061: RESIDENTIAL SEGREGATION AND CRIME TRENDS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Edem F. Avakame, Rutgers University
A Longitudinal Examination of the Influence of Residential Segregation on Homicide Victimization Rates
James Kanan, Western Kentucky University
Jerry K. Daday, Western Kentucky University
Segregation as a Moderator of Home Ownership’s Effect on Crime in African American Communities
Matthew Hasbrouck, Florida State University
The Violent Crime Drop in the United States: Do the Declines in Social Class Isolation and Racial Residential Segregation Have Any
Influence?
Edem F. Avakame, Rutgers University
SESSION 062: GENDER AND FEAR OF CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Heather Burns, Seattle University
The Gendered Effect of Viewership of TV Crime Programming on Fear of Crime
Kelley J. Hartshorn, Oklahoma State University
Lisa A. Kort-Butler, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
The Impacts of Fear of Sexual Assault versus Fear of Physical Harm among Men and Women
Kate Fox, Arizona State University
Carrie Cook, Georgia College & State University
“They just broke Up, It’s Not That Serious”: Perceptions of Reporting Behaviors in Cases of Unwanted Pursuit by Gender and
Relationship Type
Amy Cass, California State University, Fullerton
Stacy Mallicoat, California State University, Fullerton
Sex Differences in Fear for Self and Partners: An Examination Using Same- and Opposite-Sex Partners
Kevin Drakulich, Northeastern University
Kristin Rose, Northeastern University
SESSION 063: FRAMEWORKS FOR UNDERSTANDING PERCEPTIONS OF JUSTICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Leonidas Cheliotis, Queen Mary, University of London
Professional, Political and Public Discourses on Crime and Criminal Justice
Aleksandras Dobryninas, Vilnius University
A Cultural Criminogical Inquiry into the Mind: Irrationality, Social Constructions and Misperceptions, and the Development and
Maintenance of a Critical Perspective
William Calathes, New Jersey City University
An Empirical Analysis of Justice: How we Study Justice in Sociolegal Studies
Shannon Portillo, George Mason University
Jill Weinberg, Northwestern University
Erich Fromm and the Political Economy of Punishment: A Psychosocial Approach to Neoliberal Penality
Leonidas Cheliotis, Queen Mary, University of London
86
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 064: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN STUDYING RECIDIVISM AND DISPARITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Spencer D. Li, University of Macau
Predicting Recidivism with Prior Convictions Instead of Prior Arrests
William L. Oliver, Northpointe Inc.
William Dieterich, Northpointe Inc.
Tim Brennan, Northpointe Inc.
Predicting Reconviction: Do Some Predictors Fade with Length of Follow-Up?
Brian Francis, Lancaster University, UK
Keith Soothill, Lancaster University, UK
Les Humphreys, Lancaster University, UK
Examining Unwarranted Disparities in Sentencing Outcomes through the Decomposition of the Heteroskedastic Tobit Model
Jim Clark, OPPAGA
Recidivism and a Biographical Approach
Alvise Sbraccia, University of Bologna
SESSION 065: FEAR OF CRIME AND PUBLIC POLICY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Gwen van Eijk, Leiden University, The Netherlands
The Age-Suspicion Curve: Observing Age, Suspicion, and Criminality in NYPD Stop and Frisk Data
Lawrence Kom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Same Old Game: Fear, Crime, and Perceptions of Gambling in Kansas
Roy Frank Janisch, Pittsburg State University
Urban Commerce and Security Study (UCASS): Examining the Perceptions of Security across Stakeholder Groups
Renee Graphia Joyal, Rutgers University
Exploratory and Confirmatory Factor Analysis of the Women’s Correctional Safety Scales (WCSS) Instrument
James B. Wells, Eastern Kentucky University
Barbara Owen, California State University, Fresno
J. Stephen Parson, Commonwealth Research Consulting, Inc.
Chris Innes, National Institute of Corrections
Peggy S. Keller, University of Kentucky
SESSION 066: DETERRENCE THEORY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Samuel E. DeWitt, Rutgers University - Newark
Lights, Camera, (Situational) Action: A Test of Situational Action Theory
Brooke Miller, University of Texas at Dallas
Mark Saber, University of Texas at Dallas
Robert Morris, University of Texas at Dallas
Paul Donnelly, University of Texas at Dallas
On Expanding Deterrence Theory
Jaymi Elsass, Texas State University
Mark C. Stafford, Texas State University
87
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
What Makes a Prison Sentence Severe? An Exploratory Study on Subjective Sentence Severity in the Netherlands
Ellen Raaijmakers, Leiden University
Jan W. de Keijser, Leiden University
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Anja Dirkzwager, NSCR
Joni Reef, NSCR
Perceptual Deterrence and Deterrability: Individual Differences and Risk Perceptions in a National Sample
Samuel E. DeWitt, Rutgers University - Newark
Robert Apel, Rutgers University - Newark
SESSION 067: ACTIVE SHOOTER AND SERIAL KILLING EVENTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Karl Roberts, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
An Analysis of Active Shooters and Resolution Outcomes, 1966-2010
Adam Lankford, University of Alabama
The Smoking Gun: Exploring Ideological Active Shooter Events in the U.S.
Joel Capellan, CUNY Graduate Center
Serial Killers, School Shooters, Family Annihilators, Cult Leaders, and Other Multiple Murderers: Similarities, Differences, and How
They Get Caught
Arthur Garrison, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Reconceptualizing the Notion of Victim Selection, Risk, and Offender Behavior: Investigating Healthcare Professionals Who Kill Their
Patients
Christine Katherine Lubaszka, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Phillip Shon, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
SESSION 068: CRIME IN CHINA
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Shudong Zhang, University of Texas at Tyler
Decriminalization in China: Crime and Minor Offence
Moulin Xiong, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
Legal Consciousness among Chinese Citizens
Shanhe Jiang, University of Toledo
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
Towards Harmonized Transnational Cybercrime Laws: The Development of Cybercrime Laws in China
Lennon Yao-chung Chang, City University of Hong Kong
Between God and Government: Intersections of Marriage, State, and Customary Laws in China
Xuan Niu, University of Hong Kong
White Collar Crime in Transitional Economy: A Case of Special Interests-Induced Paralysis
Shudong Zhang, University of Texas at Tyler
Colin Wark, Texas A&M University - Kingsville
SESSION 069: ONLINE CHILD SEXUAL EXPLOITATION: CHILD PORNOGRAPHY AND SEXTING
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Renee Dorothy Lamphere, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
An Examination of Offending Patterns of Child Pornography Offenders
Ashley Lynn Allen, Texas State University
Donna M. Vandiver, Texas State University
88
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Co-Offending in the Context of Online Child Exploitation Networks
Bryce Garreth Westlake, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Sexting: Perceptions and Practices among College Students
Prit Paul Kaur, Auburn University at Montgomery
Theresa Pelfrey, Auburn University at Montgomery
U.S. Child Pornography Offenders: Sexually Dangerous Behavior
Kim Steven Hunt, U.S. Sentencing Commission
SESSION 070: OFFENDERS AND PLACES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Martha Jane Smith, Wichita State University
How Are Street Drug Dealing Locations Selected? A Situational Analysis
Ko-Hsin Hsu, Rutgers University
Space-Time Dynamics of Crime in Transport Nodes
Corné Uittenbogaard, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
Vania Ceccato, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
Adult and Juvenile Victims of Homicide: A Comparison of the Settings and Circumstances of Lethal Violence in Dallas, Texas
Donald Hunt, Georgia State University
Lisa R. Muftić, Georgia State University
Using Crime Scripts to Explore Constitutionally Recognized Levels of Privacy for Crime Places
Martha Jane Smith, Wichita State University
Alison McKenney Brown, Wichita State University
SESSION 071: PREDICTING PAROLE DECISIONS AND OUTCOMES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Carolyn Yule, University of Guelph
Assessing the Influence of Type of Prison Release on Parole Outcomes in a U.S. Cohort of Offenders Released in 1999
Gina A. Curcio, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Phil D. McCormack, University of Massachusetts Lowell
April Pattavina, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Exploring the Timing of Early Parole Discharge
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
Kristofer Bret Bucklen, PA Dept. of Corrections / University of Maryland
Inside the Parole Hearing: Structural and Interactional Influences on Parole Decisions
Richard Tewksbury, University of Louisville
David Patrick Connor, University of Louisville
The Effect of Gender on Parole Decision-Making
Carolyn Yule, University of Guelph
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Nathan Innocente, University of Toronto
SESSION 072: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Shelley Listwan, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
89
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
An Evaluation of A Drug Treatment Court Program in Western Pennsylvania
Rebecca J. Schnupp, Slippery Rock University
David R. Champion, Slippery Rock University
Sarah Kuehn, Slippery Rock University
Evaluation of Outcomes in a Statewide Sample of TASC Clients
Kristen E. DeVall, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Christina Lanier, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Michael O. Maume, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Restorative Justice: The Effective Interventions for School Bullying
Youngsun Han, Ministry of Justice
Wook Kang, University of Central Oklahoma
SeokJin Jeong, University of Texas at Arlington
The Wood Pilot Project: Outcome Evaluation Findings
Shelley Listwan, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Diana Bailey, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Deborah Koetzle, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 073: HOMELAND SECURITY AND OFFICER CHARACTERISTICS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David Edward Barlow, Fayetteville State University
Perceived Risk of Homeland Security Incidents: The Insignificance of Actual Risk Factors
Melissa R. Haynes, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Matthew J. Giblin, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Where We Are: Era of Homeland Security Policing, Community Oriented Policing, or Both?
MoonSun Kim, SUNY Brockport
Melchor de Guzman, SUNY Brockport
The Changing Face of Local Policing: American-Muslim Police Officers
Qasim Haq, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Maria Haberfeld, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Bryan S. Turner, CUNY Graduate Center
The Need for Latino/a Police Officers
David Edward Barlow, Fayetteville State University
Melissa Hickman Barlow, Fayetteville State University
SESSION 074: ROUNDTABLE: CHANGING ASPECTS OF GANGS
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
George W. Knox, National Gang Crime Research Center
Discussants:
Jeffery M. Johnson, University of Mississippi
Carter F. Smith, Austin Peay State University
D. Lee Gilbertson, St. Cloud State University
SESSION 075: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGY EDUCATION I
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Criminal Justice Learning Community at UNC Charlotte
Douglas Andrew Baals, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Charisse T.M. Coston, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
90
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Depictions of Terrorism in Introductory Criminal Justice Texts
Taj Mahon-Haft, Radford University
Kathryn Rasiak, Radford University
Internationalizing Your Criminal Justice Program: Strategies to Successfully Integrate International Students into a Graduate Program
Yaschica Williams, University of North Alabama
SESSION 076: ROUNDTABLE: CRITICAL WHITE STUDIES IN CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Justin M. Smith, Central Michigan University
Discussants:
Stephanie Whitehead, Indiana University East
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
Tyler Wall, Eastern Kentucky University
Danielle Dirks, Occidental College
Elyshia Aseltine, Lycoming College
Justin M. Smith, Central Michigan University
SESSION 077: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY: ADVANCING PERSPECTIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
An Analysis of Homicide-Suicides: Assessing the Impact of Structural Conditions at the Census Tract Level in Chicago
Shannon Rose Simone, University of Central Florida
Amy Reckdenwald, University of Central Florida
By the Letter of the Law: Legal Consciousness and the Occupy Toronto Movement
Brenna Keatinge, University of Toronto
Meghan Dawe, University of Toronto
Social Psychology of Offender and Bystander Interaction in Public Space: Towards More Complete Understanding of Informal Social
Control of Crime
Ana Maria Lobos, University of Miami
Feodor A. Gostjev, University of Miami
Theological Roots of Restorative Justice
Jennifer Jean Marson, Western Michigan University
SESSION 078: PEERS AND DELINQUENCY
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Cesar J. Rebellon, University of New Hampshire
The Dynamics of Peer Influence on Deviant and Prosocial Behavior
Barbara Costello, University of Rhode Island
Trina Hope, University of Oklahoma
The Social Transmission of Delinquency: Revisiting the Importance of Peer Attitudes
Daniel T. Ragan, Pennsylvania State University
D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
Mark E. Feinberg, Pennsylvania State University
Unpacking the Black Box of ‘How Peers Matter’ Using the Integrative Model of Interpersonal Influence
Jacob Thomas Neal Young, Arizona State University
Cesar J. Rebellon, University of New Hampshire
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
Frank Weerman, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
When Direct Peer Measures Are Not Available: The Utility and Limits of Latent Variable Approaches
Cesar J. Rebellon, University of New Hampshire
Kathy Modecki, Murdoch University
91
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 079: RISK TERRAIN MODELING: THEORIES AND METHODS OF RISK
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Isaac Van Patten, Radford University
Vulnerability and Exposure to Crime: Developing and Testing a Theory of Risky Places
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
Investigating Place-Based Perceptions of Risk
Eon Kim, Rutgers University
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
Robbery Risk as a Co-Function of Place and Time
Yasemin Gaziarifoglu, Rutgers University
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
RTM in Smaller Urban Areas: An Evaluation and Refinement
Isaac Van Patten, Radford University
Andrew S. Foy, Radford University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 080: HIGH PROFILE EVENTS: MEDIA COVERAGE AND IMPLICATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mark S. Hamm, Indiana State University
Constructing Crime, Culpability, and College Athletics: Cultural Criminology and the Penn State Scandal
Vikas Kumar Gumbhir, Gonzaga University
Rachel Wagner, Gonzaga University
Exploring Media Constructions of the Toronto G20: Image, the Protest Paradigm, and Citizen Journalism
Stephanie L. Keyes, University of Windsor
Gender, Emotion Work, and Communal Grief after the Virginia Tech Shooting
Laura E. Agnich, Georgia Southern University
James E. Hawdon, Virginia Tech
Media Construction of the 1971 Attica Prison Riot: Claims-Makers, Frame Salience, and the Cultural Geography of Readership
John P. Walsh, Grand Valley State University
Joanne Ziembo-Vogl, Grand Valley State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 081: OFFENDERS' PERSPECTIVES ON PREDATION, RETALIATION, AND DRUG
DEALING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
Examining Expertise In Residential Burglars: The Results Of A Pilot Study Using Innovative Technology
Claire Nee, University of Portsmouth, UK
Martin White, University of Sussex, UK
Kirk Woolford, University of Sussex, UK
Tudor Pascu, University of Sussex, UK
Leon Barker, University of Sussex, UK
92
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Crime in Motion: Predation, Retaliation, and the Spread of Urban Violence
Richard Wright, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Volkan Topalli, Georgia State University
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
Restrictive Deterrence and Bentham’s 5 Sanctions: A Study of Young Suburban Drug Dealers and Users
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
“Talking Shit”: Rumor, Gossip, and Restrictive Deterrence in Middle-Class Drug Markets
Timothy Dickinson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 082: SOCIAL MEDIA: RESEARCH AND CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Manish Madan, Michigan State University
Police Officers, Free Speech, and the Social Media: Misconduct in the 21st Century
Tony Gaskew, University of Pittsburgh
Tweets of Death: Exploring the Correlation between Social Media Reporting and Cartel Violence in Mexico
Daniel Mabrey, University of New Haven
Vesna Markovic, University of New Haven
Amira Al-Zoubi, University of New Haven
Understanding Anti-social and Documented Behavior on Social Networking Sites: A First Look
Michele Grillo, Monmouth University
Katelyn Cahill, Monmouth University
Catherine Musa, Monmouth University
Discussant:
Joseph DeLeeuw, Indiana University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 083: NEW RESEARCH ON VIOLENCE, GANGS, AND DRUG DEALING IN THE
PITTSBURGH YOUTH STUDY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Illicit Marketplace Activities and Violent Victimization: Examining Person and Context Specific Effects
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
Profiling Drug Dealing Careers among Black and White Males from Adolescence into Early Adulthood
Dustin Pardini, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
Rebecca Gazda, University of Pittsburgh
Rachel Gordon, University of Illinois at Chicago
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
The Prediction of Homicide Revisited: Results from the Causes and Correlates of Delinquency Program
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
David Huizinga, University of Colorado
Terence P. Thornberry, University of Maryland
Rebecca Stallings, University of Pittsburgh
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Dustin Pardini, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
93
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Co-Occurrence of Drug Selling, Gun Carrying, and Gang Participation among Boys in the Pittsburgh Youth Study
Rachel Gordon, University of Illinois at Chicago
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
Helene R. White, Rutgers University
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Discussant:
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 084: STATE CRIME VICTIMOLOGY I
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Dawn L. Rothe, Old Dominion University
Responding to Victims and Survivors of State Crime: The Case of State Managed Human Experimentation
Stephen F. Simms, Carleton University
In the Wake of Disaster: Hurricane Katrina Victims’ Attempts at Righting the Wrongs of the State
Kelly L. Faust, Ohio University
Susan M. Carlson, Western Michigan University
To Conquer Empires: The Structural Victimization of the Somali Pirate
Victoria Collins, Old Dominion University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 085: COMMUNITY CONTEXT AND PRISONER REENTRY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Xia Wang, Arizona State University
The Role of Family and Prison Experiences in Self-Perceptions about Returning Home
Daniel O'Connell, University of Delaware
Christy Visher, University of Delaware
Moving on Up? Predictors of Residential Change among Parolees
Breanne Pleggenkuhle, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Beth M. Huebner, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Race Differences in Post-Prison Job Starts and Recidivism
Christopher M. Huggins, University of Kentucky
Paul E. Bellair, Ohio State University
Brian R. Kowalski, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Brian Martin, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Community Characteristics and Recidivism: Evidence from a Multi-Level Study of Parolees in Ohio
Alyssa Whitby Chamberlain, Arizona State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 086: PUBLIC OPINION, NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT, AND SEX OFFENDING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lesley Reid, Georgia State University
94
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Residency Restrictions for Sex Offenders: Public Opinion on Appropriate Distances
Amy L. Anderson, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Lisa Sample, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Calli Cain, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Sex Offender Reintegration: Consequences of the Local Neighborhood Context
Keri B. Burchfield, Northern Illinois University
William Mingus, University of Illinois at Chicago
Criminal Justice Professionals’ Views of Sex Offender Policies
Elizabeth Ehrhardt Mustaine, University of Central Florida
Richard Tewksbury, University of Louisville
Social Disorganization and Sex Offenders
Lesley Reid, Georgia State University
Katherine L. Schweigert, Georgia State University
Anthony R. Hatch, Georgia State University
Deirdre Oakley, Georgia State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 087: CRIMINOLOGY IN CHINA
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Liqun Cao, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
The Rule of Law in Chongqing: The Case of Li Zhuang
Liqun Cao, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Fighting the Obscene, Pornographic, and Unhealthy: An Analysis of China’s Comprehensive Regulation on Online Pornography
within the Global Context
Bin Liang, Oklahoma State University, Tulsa
Do the “Haves” Come Out Ahead in Criminal Cases? The Impact of Victim Characteristics on Case Outcomes for Chinese IP Theft
Cases
Haiyan Liu, Indiana University Bloomington
Migration and Satisfaction with Crime Control in Urban China
Yue Zhuo, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 088: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, PART I: A
NATIONAL PERSPECTIVE
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Moderator:
Ted Gest, Criminal Justice Journalists
Presenters:
Laurie Robinson, George Mason University
John H. Laub, National Institute of Justice
Robert J. Tracy, Chicago Police Department
Ben Poston, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Todd Clear, Rutgers University - Newark
95
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 089: THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF CORRECTIONS’ NORVAL MORRIS PROJECT
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Chris Innes, National Institute of Corrections
The Norval Morris Project: Creating a “Knowledge Pump” for Practitioners
Bradford Bogue, Justice Systems and Training
Chris Innes, National Institute of Corrections
Measuring a Healing Environment in Corrections
Janeen Buck Willison, The Urban Institute
Trends in Incarceration Rates, Crime Rates, and State Budgets
Chris Innes, National Institute of Corrections
Bradford Bogue, Justice Systems and Training
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 090: CRIME AND PLACE: BROKEN WINDOWS POLICING AND THEORY AT
MICROPLACES
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Joshua Hinkle, Georgia State University
The Problem of Statistical Power in Evaluating Hot Spots Policing in Smaller Cities
Joshua Hinkle, Georgia State University
David Weisburd, George Mason University / Hebrew University
Christine Famega, California State University, San Bernardino
Justin Ready, Arizona State University
The Impact of Variations in Hot Spots Policing Dosage on Street-Segment Crime and Disorder
Christine Famega, California State University, San Bernardino
Joshua Hinkle, Georgia State University
David Weisburd, George Mason University / Hebrew University
Justin Ready, Arizona State University
Observations from the Field: Rearticulating Broken Windows Theory as a Culture of Permissiveness
Justin Ready, Arizona State University
Joshua Hinkle, Georgia State University
Discussant:
David Weisburd, George Mason University / Hebrew University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 091: SMART POLICING: RESULTS AND IMPLICATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
James R. Coldren, Jr., Governors State University
Using Predictive Spatial Models to Geographically Target Burglary Prevention Interventions
Robert Nash Parker, University of California
Richard Banasiak, Indio, California Police Department
Operation LASER: Reducing Gun-Related Crime in Los Angeles
Craig Uchida, Justice & Security Strategies
96
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Strategic Tactical Deployment: Violence Reduction in Joliet, Illinois
Robert M. Lombardo, Loyola University Chicago
Ira Sommers, Loyola University Chicago / NORC at the University of Chicago
SPI Site Methodological Review
George Fachner, CNA
Reducing Prescription Drug Abuse in Northern Nevada
Emmanuel Barthe, University of Nevada, Reno
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 092: NEW AND INNOVATIVE USES OF OFFICIAL DATA
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Examining Violence in Households with Children Using the National Crime Victimization Survey
Jennifer L. Truman, U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Use of the National Crime Victimization Survey to Examine Changes in Criminal Justice Response to Rape and Sexual Assault
Shannan Catalano, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Use of Survey Data for Monitoring, Transparency, and Regulation: BJS’s Experience with Implementing the Prison Rape Elimination
Act
Allen Beck, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Using NIBRS to Examine the Social, Legal, and Organizational Climate Surrounding the Exceptional Clearance of Sexual Assault
Cases
Kimberly Martin, Old Dominion University
Michele Stacey, Virginia Union University
Discussant:
Howard Snyder, Bureau of Justice Statistics
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 093: ACCOUNTS OF DESISTANCE: RESULTS FROM FOUR DIVERSE POPULATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Danielle Arlanda Harris, San Jose State University
Desistance from Sexual Offending: The Impact of Policies that Restrict Employment and Residence
Danielle Arlanda Harris, San Jose State University
Placing Parenthood in Perspective: How Having Kids Influences Involvement in Crime for Formerly Sanctioned At-Risk Young
Adults
Sarah Boonstoppel, University of Maryland
Return to Ghost Town: Narratives of Incarceration and Reentry in a West Oakland Neighborhood
Alessandro De Giorgi, San Jose State University
Life after Expungement: Preliminary Findings from the SJSU Record Clearance Project
Nishtha Jolly, San Jose State University
Danielle Arlanda Harris, San Jose State University
97
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 094: POLICING MUSLIM COMMUNITIES: INTERNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE
PERSPECTIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
S. George Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
Authors
Arvind Verma, Indiana University Bloomington
Maria Haberfeld, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Farrukh Hakeem, Shaw University
Critics
Lynn Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
Irum Shiekh, University of California, Riverside
Discussant:
S. George Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 095: A THEORY OF AFRICAN AMERICAN OFFENDING: RACE, RACISM, AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Authors
James Unnever, University of South Florida, Sarasota-Manatee
Shaun Gabbidon, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
Critics
Robert Agnew, Emory University
Rod K. Brunson, Rutgers University
Katheryn Russell-Brown, University of Florida
SESSION 096: VICTIMIZATION RISK IN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jenny Chingkhannem Tonsing, Royal Holloway, University of London
Student Victimization Surveys: A Comparative Review of Scottish and U.S. Data
Lesley McMillan, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
Annette Robertson, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Jon Godwin, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
Trust and Victimization Experiences in Europe: a Multilevel Analysis
Silvia Staubli, University of Zurich
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
Witnessing and Reporting Violent Crime in the Caribbean: Results from the 2009 Jamaican National Crime Victimization Survey
Scot Wortley, University of Toronto
Natasha Madon, University of Toronto
A Multilevel Approach to Crime Victimization in Korea in Terms of Crosslevel Interaction Effects
Cheong Sun Park, Korean National Police University
HyungJin Lim, University of Cincinnati
South Asian Women’s Experiences with Intimate Partner Violence in Hong Kong
Jenny Chingkhannem Tonsing, Royal Holloway, University of London
98
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 097: GENDER ISSUES IN POLICING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Melissa S. Morabito, University of Massachusetts Lowell
A Survey of Maternity Policies and Pregnancy
Gail D. Humiston, University of Central Florida
Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Illinois State University
Women Police Officers Workplace Problems and Coping Strategies
Robin N. Haarr, Eastern Kentucky University
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
Policing Young Women Considered Violent: The Influence of Gender on Arrest Decision Making
Suzanne Young, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Gender and Gendered Institutions: A Biographical Exploration of Women’s Experiences Working in Law Enforcement
Melissa S. Morabito, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Tara O'Connor Shelley, Colorado State University
SESSION 098: CURRENT ISSUES IN CRIME ANALYSIS AND INTELLIGENCE-LED POLICING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jessica Dunham, University of Cincinnati / SANDAG
A Longitudinal Analysis of the Adoption of Crime Analysis and Information Technologies in Local Police Departments
Blake Matthew Randol, Washington State University
Criminal Path Mapping: When Criminals and Crimes Converge
Michael J. Jenkins, University of New Haven
John DeCarlo, University of New Haven
Individual Dangerousness and National Security: Criminology vs. Intelligence
Stephane Leman-Langlois, Laval University
Social Responses to Crime: Application and Use of Intelligence Led Policing
Jessica Dunham, University of Cincinnati / SANDAG
SESSION 099: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brian E. Oliver, Northwestern College
Competing Methodologies in Crime and Justice Studies: A Comparison of Positivist, Interpretive, and Critical Approaches
Frank Hughes, Binghamton University
Criminology Needs More Class: Inequality, Corporate Persons, and an Impoverished Discipline
Paul Leighton, Eastern Michigan University
Exploring the Connection between Biblical Scripture and Criminological Theory
Brian E. Oliver, Northwestern College
SESSION 100: EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kristin Rose, Northeastern University
Establishing a National Database of Correctional Education Programming
Daniel R. Lee, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Dennis Giever, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
99
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Uncovering the Educational Experiences of Incarcerated Women
Kristenne Marie Robison, Westminster College
Jennifer Cantella, Westminster College
Joseph Ritchie, Westminster College
What Works in Correctional Education
Lois Davis, RAND Corporation
Jessica Saunders, RAND Corporation
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
Unpacking the “Black Box”: The Application of Theory to Correctional Education Effectiveness
Kristin Rose, Northeastern University
SESSION 101: INEQUALITY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESOURCES AND EXPERIENCES
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Nick Richardson, North Carolina State University
Access to English in Queensland
Mark Lauchs, Queensland University of Technology
Mass Incarceration as a Welfare Handout: Welfare-Dependency Narratives in the World of Custody and Courts
Nicole Martorano Van Cleve, Temple University
Armando Lara-Millan, Northwestern University
Racial Differences in Pretrial Needs: An Examination of the Hamilton County Inventory of Need Pretrial Screening Tool
Krista Gehring, University of Houston - Downtown
Race and Institutional Misconduct: The Predictive Validity of the LSI-R
Abby L. Vandenberg, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Pauline K. Brennan, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Timbre L. Wulf-Ludden, University of Nebraska at Omaha
SESSION 102: EFFECTIVENESS OF INSTITUTIONAL PROGRAMMING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Tara Sams, University of Cincinnati
A Look at the Effectiveness of Reentry Programs at the Jail Level
Mindy Weller, University of Central Florida
Detainees in the Netherlands: A Comparison between Prisoners Who Enter a Rehabilitation Program and Prisoners Who Don’t
Anouk Quirina Bosma, Leiden University
Maarten Kunst, Leiden University
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Anja Dirkzwager, NSCR
The Effect of Prison-Based College Education on Recidivism
Ryang Hui Kim, NYS DOCCS
David D. Clark, University at Albany, SUNY
Saved, Salvaged, or Sunk: The Effects of Faith-Based Interventions on Offender Recidivism
Tara Sams, University of Cincinnati
Lacey Schaefer, University of Cincinnati
Jennifer L. Lux, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 103: EMPIRICAL TESTS AND EXTENSIONS OF MOFFITT'S LIFE-COURSE APPROACH
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Melissa A. Petkovsek, Sam Houston State University
100
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Closing the Maturity Gap: Exploring the Relationship between Changes in the Maturity Gap and Adolescence-Limited Offending
Michael LeAnn Carriaga, University of Texas at Dallas
An Empirical Examination of Moffitt’s “Snares” Hypothesis
Alex Widdowson, Florida State University
Gang Membership, Life-Course Persistent, and Adolescent Limited Offending: A Test of Alternative Hypotheses
Melissa A. Petkovsek, Sam Houston State University
Brian B. Boutwell, Sam Houston State University
David C. Pyrooz, Sam Houston State University
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
SESSION 104: ADVANCING THE STUDY OF COLLECTIVE EFFICACY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Carleton, Simon Fraser University
Collective Efficacy and Disasters: Crime in the Aftermath of Hurricane Katrina
Ashley K. Farmer, University of Delaware
Community Gardens and Collective Efficacy: A Preliminary Analysis of Crime Rates
Lesli Blair, University of Cincinnati
Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
Much ado about je ne sais quoi: Expanding Traditional Measures of Collective Efficacy
Rebecca Carleton, Simon Fraser University
Garth Davies, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 105: GENDER VULNERABILITIES: CARE AND TREATMENT OF GIRLS IN THE
JUSTICE SYSTEM
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Suman Kakar, Florida International University
Catching Them Early: Status Crimes, Gender Vulnerabilities, and the Consequences of Early Intervention Initiatives
Daniel McCarthy, University of Surrey, UK
Access and Alternatives for Youth in the Child Welfare and Juvenile Justice Systems
Haley Rae Reimbold, Vera Institute of Justice
Evan Elkin, Vera Institute of Justice
The Latina Penalty: Juvenile Court and Correctional Attitudes toward the Latina Juvenile Offender
Lisa Pasko, University of Denver
Vera Lopez, Arizona State University
Juvenile Sex Trafficking: Victims or Offenders?
Suman Kakar, Florida International University
Sanjeev Kuldeep Sirpal, Florida International University
SESSION 106: ROLE OF RACE IN PERCEPTIONS OF JUSTICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
J.W. Andrew Ranson, Florida State University
Perceptions of Juvenile Offending, Racial Stereotypes, and Support for Harsh Policies
Kelly Welch, Villanova University
Justin T. Pickett, University at Albany, SUNY
Ted Chiricos, Florida State University
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
101
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Perceptions of Black Clients by White Probation Officers in a Post-Racial United States: Does it Matter?
Renatto V. Carr, McKendree University
The Effects of Racial and Ethnic Differences in Perceived Injustice on Public Support for Capital Punishment
Cedric Jean Bernard Michel, University of South Florida
John K. Cochran, University of South Florida
Exploring the Potential for Generalizability of Minority Group Contact on Criminal Stereotypes
Kristin Golden, NJ Department of Law & Public Safety
Racial Threat and its Impact on Punitive Attitudes toward Michael Vick
J.W. Andrew Ranson, Florida State University
Matthew Hasbrouck, Florida State University
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Nicole Leeper Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
SESSION 107: CRIME AND CRIME CONTROL IN AFRICA
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Frederick Paul Roth, Marshall University
Citizen Confidence in Criminal Justice in New and Emerging Democracies: A Comparison of Four Former African British Colonies
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
Joseph D. Johnson, Rowan University
Defending the Nigerian Homeland
Mathew Ugbana, Texas Southern University
Jason Willianms, Texas Southern University
Pierre Perry, Texas Southern University
Heather Alaniz, Texas Southern University
Jude L. Jokwi, Texas Southern University
Ifeoma Okoye, Texas Southern University
Lucy Tsado, Texas Southern University
Alaba Oludare, Texas Southern University
Ihekwoaba Declan Onwudiwe, Texas Southern University
Public Trust in the Police: Factors that Shape Trust in the Ghanaian Police
Francis Danso Boateng, Washington State University
The Curious Case of Cape Town's Community Courts
Frederick Paul Roth, Marshall University
SESSION 108: EVALUATING SELF-CONTROL THEORY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
Applying New Self-Control to Multiple Deviant and Criminal Behaviors
Whitney D. Gunter, Western Michigan University
Nicholas W. Bakken, University of Wisconsin - La Crosse
Assessing the Relationship between Parent and Child Reports of Self Control and Antisocial Outcomes
Brie Diamond, University of Texas at Dallas
The Stability of the Grasmick Scale: An Examination of Construct Validity across Two College Student Samples
Vanessa Woodward, University of Southern Mississippi
O. Hayden Griffin, III, University of Southern Mississippi
John Stogner, Georgia Southern University
Jessica Vinson, University of Southern Mississippi
102
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
What Really Is the Effect of Self-Control on Offending?
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
Joshua C. Cochran, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
SESSION 109: GAINING A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF TERRORIST VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Joshua Freilich, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Anatomy of a Sovereign Citizen Group: Creating a Target Model
Molly Marie Mee, Seattle University
Bosniaks and Kosovars: Transplanted Terrorism and Beheading Plots in the United States
Darrell Irwin, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Applying Life History Techniques to Understand Radicalism and Participation in Extremist Activities
Sheila Royo Maxwell, Michigan State University
Does Leadership and Organizational Structure Influence Violent and Non-Violent Group Behavior in Domestic Extremist Groups?
Michael Suttmoeller, Michigan State University
Steven Chermak, Michigan State University
Joshua Freilich, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 110: CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESPONSES TO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: POLICE, COURTS,
AND CORRECTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Monica Solinas-Saunders, Indiana University Northwest
Deterrent Effects of Arrest on Male Domestic Batterers by Batterer Typology
Richard R. Johnson, University of Toledo
Case Dismissed: Factors Influencing the Dismissal of Intimate Partner Abuse Cases
Jennifer Roark, University of Colorado - Boulder
Assessing Key Factors in the Combined Use of Community Corrections and Treatment Programs
Monica Solinas-Saunders, Indiana University Northwest
SESSION 111: INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
COURSES I
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Stephanie Whitus, Aurora University
Creative Writing in Criminal Justice 101?
Annette Kuhlmann, University of Wisconsin - Baraboo
Rubinstein Bargaining in the Undergraduate Classroom: A Teaching Tool
Hank J. Brightman, Naval War College
Does What We Do In The Classroom Matter? A Pilot Study in a Corrections' Class
Gary N. Keveles, University of Wisconsin - Superior
Teaching through Drawing: A Creative Process to Assess Learning and Change in Perception in Criminology Courses
Stephanie Whitus, Aurora University
Kevin Walsh, Aurora University
103
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 112: HATE CRIME ISSUES: COMMUNITY ORGANIZING AND IMPACTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Rejected and Dejected: The Impacts of Islamophobic Violence on Community Members
Barbara Perry, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Sticks and Stones: Examining the Effects of Violent Rhetoric on Network Placement on Stromfront.org
Krynn Finstad, Simon Fraser University
Responding to Hate: Collective Efficacy, Social Cohesion and the Other
Carolyn Turpin-Petrosino, Bridgewater State University
Inside Skinheads Organizations: Recruitment through the Networks' Perspective
Clémentine Simon, University of Montreal
SESSION 113: CRIME AND THE COURTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Holly Sarinic, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Acts of Deportation: Immigration Appeals Court as a Theater of Cruelty
David Charles Brotherton, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Are Patriarchal Countries Less Responsive to Enforcing Human Trafficking Laws?
Christina Fiorito, Loyola University Chicago
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
Examining Sexual Assault Trends in Canada: The Impact of Rape Law Reform Over Three Decades
Joanna Amirault, Simon Fraser University
Patrick Lussier, Universite Laval
Internet Piracy: Is Legislation the Only Answer?
Holly Sarinic, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 114: INTERNATIONAL POLICING
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Edward Maguire, American University
New Place, Same Issues: Bangladeshi Immigrants' Views of the Police
Mahfuzul I. Khondaker, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
Police Reform, Training and Crime: Experimental Evidence from Colombia’s Plan Cuadrantes
Daniel E. Ortega, IESA / CAF
Daniel Mejia, Universidad de los Andes
Juan Felipe Garcia, Fundacion Ideas para la Paz
The Social Structure of Networked-Policing on the Waterfront: A Tale of Two Ports
Russell Brewer, Griffith University
Understanding Public Perceptions of the Police in the Caribbean
Edward Maguire, American University
Richard R. Bennett, American University
Anthony D. Harriott, University of West Indies, Mona Campus
104
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 115: ROUNDTABLE: A DISCUSSION ON PENNSYLVANIA'S INCARCERATION BINGE
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Timothy J. Holler, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Discussants:
Philip Wagner, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Nayab Hakim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Darla Elaine Drummond, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Richard Walker, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Brandon T. Stroup, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 116: ROUNDTABLE: RAPE IS RAPE - HOW DENIAL FUELS THE HIDDEN CRISIS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky
Discussants:
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Raquel Kennedy Bergen, St. Joseph's University
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Jody Raphael, DePaul University
SESSION 117: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGY EDUCATION II
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
The Criminal Justice Internship Capstone Course: Experiential Learning
Barbara A. Morrell, St. Joseph's College
Taking the Criminological Imagination Forward: Lessons from the Classroom
Paula Bowles, University of Northampton
Manos Daskalou, University of Northampton
Technology and Pedagogy
Kimberly Collica, Berkeley College
Gennifer Furst, William Paterson University
Nickie Phillips, St. Francis University
Sheetal Ranjan, William Paterson University
Aviva Twersky-Glasner, Bridgewater State University
SESSION 118: ROUNDTABLE: BLUE CRIMINOLOGY: THE POWER OF UNITED NATIONS IDEAS
TO COUNTER CRIME GLOBALLY - A MONOGRAPHIC STUDY
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rosemary Barberet, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Discussants:
Janice Joseph, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Mangai Natarajan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
SESSION 119: VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Sue Katz, Morehead State University
105
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Darfur and the United Nations: Realpolitik in Decision-Making and Intervention
Angela Overton, Old Dominion University
Empowering Women to Effect Justice: Individualizing Global Violence against Women
Michelle Hughes Miller, University of South Florida
Media Reports of Rape during and Immediately After the Rwandan Genocide
Christina DeJong, Michigan State University
Type B Honor Violence and the Movement of Moral Time
Mark Cooney, University of Georgia
SESSION 120: MULTI-LEVEL MODELS OF NEIGHBORHOOD EFFECTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sara Evans, University of West Florida
Cognitive Skills and Juvenile Delinquency: Can Good Neighborhoods Protect Not-So-Clever Kids?
Beidi Dong, University of Florida
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Do Neighborhoods Matter? A Multi-Level Analysis of the Contextual Effect
Young Kim, Eastern Michigan University
Examining Individual Risk and Protective Factors on Gang Joining within the Context of Neighborhood and School
Lidia E. Nuno, Arizona State University
Charles M. Katz, Arizona State University
The Effect of Corporal Punishment on Antisocial Behavior: Variations by Neighborhood Context
Sara Evans, University of West Florida
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 121: CONTEMPORARY POLICE CHALLENGES: CONSOLIDATION, CRIME
CONTROL, AND ESTABLISHMENT DATA
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jeremy M. Wilson, Michigan State University
Public Safety Consolidation in the U.S.: Prevalence, Nature and Implementation
Jeremy M. Wilson, Michigan State University
Alexander Weiss, Alexander Weiss Consulting
Justin Heinonen, Michigan State University
Traffic Enforcement and Crime Control: The DDACTS Model
Alexander Weiss, Alexander Weiss Consulting
Twenty-Five Years of LEMAS: The Utilization of Variables and Constructs Derived from the BJS LEMAS
Matthew Matusiak, Sam Houston State University
Bradley A. Campbell, Sam Houston State University
William R. King, Sam Houston State University
Discussant:
Edward Maguire, American University
106
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 122: SPATIOTEMPORAL PATTERNS AND CHANGES IN PHILADELPHIA
METROPOLITAN CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brian Wyant, LaSalle University
Conceptualizing and Operationalizing a Muncipalized Crime Pattern Theory
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
Ralph Taylor, Temple University
David Elesh, Temple University
Lallen Johnson, University of Central Florida
Jennifer McGovern, Temple University
Modeling the Stability of Metropolitan Municipal Crime Clusters
Lallen Johnson, University of Central Florida
One-Year Look-Ahead Municipality Crime Predictions in a Large Metropolitan Area
Ralph Taylor, Temple University
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
David Elesh, Temple University
Lallen Johnson, University of Central Florida
Discussant:
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 123: RACE, WOMEN, AND VICTIMIZATION: NEW USES OF NCVS DATA
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Janet L. Lauritsen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Violence Against Women: What Crimes Are Reported and What Crimes Do Police Clear?
Callie Marie Rennison, University of Colorado - Denver
Lynn A. Addington, American University
Understanding the Relationship between Stalking Victimization and Other Forms of Victimization: An Analysis of NCVS Data
Jennifer Gatewood Owens, University of Missouri - St. Louis
How Does Victimization Affect Moving Behavior: Comparing Whites, Blacks, and Hispanics
Min Xie, Arizona State University
Race, Disadvantage, Family Structure, and Violence Against Women:
Karen Heimer, University of Iowa
Janet L. Lauritsen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Joseph B. Lang, University of Iowa
Min Xie, Arizona State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 124: CONSTRUCTING SOCIAL PROBLEMS: SCHOOL CRIME, ECSTASY DEATHS,
AND TERRORISM
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Landon Shane Bevier, University of Tennessee
107
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Beating Up on Bullying: A Narrative of the Construction of a Social Problem
Robert Brooks, Worcester State University
Jeff W. Cohen, University of Washington - Tacoma
School Crime and Violence as Represented by Canadian News Media
Stephanie Howells, McMaster University
Ecstasy-Related Deaths at Raves: Media Portrayals and Political Interpretations in L.A. and Las Vegas
Alexa Sardina, Indiana University Bloomington
What To Do in Case of Terrorism: Comparing Terrorism Handbooks from Two Distinct Eras
Johnny Nhan, Texas Christian University
Michael Katovich, Texas Christian University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 125: PAUL GOLDSTEIN’S TRIPARTITE FRAMEWORK ON DRUGS AND VIOLENCE:
LOOKING BACK AND FORWARD AFTER 30 YEARS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Henry H. Brownstein, NORC at the University of Chicago
Discussants:
Paul J. Goldstein, University of Illinois at Chicago
Lana D. Harrison, University of Delaware
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
Sheigla Brighid Murphy, Institute for Scientific Analysis
Carrie Beth Oser, University of Kentucky
Barry Spunt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 126: STATE CRIME VICTIMOLOGY II
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephen F. Simms, Carleton University
WikiLeaks versus Goliath: Social Harm and the Maintenance of State Legitimacy, Power, and Control
Dawn L. Rothe, Old Dominion University
Kevin Steinmetz, Sam Houston State University
Punishing the Innocent: Analyzing the Effects of International Sanctions on Victims of State Crime
Melanie M. Holland, Old Dominion University
Female Infanticide in India: The Overlooked Victims of State Crime
Caitlin V. Muldoon, Old Dominion University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 127: CURRENT RESEARCH IN BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Examining the Genetic and Environmental Influences on Self-Control and Delinquency: Results from a Genetically Informative
Analysis of Sibling Pairs
Eric J. Connolly, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
108
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Public Opinion of Genetic and Neuropsychological Contributors to Criminal Behaviors
Jamie Marie Gajos, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
Jason Bratton, Florida State University
Corporal Punishment and Antisocial Outcomes in Children: The Role of Genetic Risk Factors
Nicholas Chaviano, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
Smoking During Pregnancy and Antisocial Behavior in Offspring: Reexamining the Association
Joseph A. Schwartz, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 128: CONDUCTING RESEARCH AND ANALYZING DATA ON VIOLENCE AGAINST
AMERICAN INDIAN AND ALASKA NATIVE WOMEN
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ronet Bachman, University of Delaware
Psychometric Properties of The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey Subsample of Self-Identified Native American
Men and Women
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Jane E. Palmer, National Institute of Justice / American University
Christine Crossland, National Institute of Justice
Content Analysis of Case Narratives of FBI Cases in Indian Country
Jane E. Palmer, National Institute of Justice / American University
Alison Brooks, National Institute of Justice
Christine Crossland, National Institute of Justice
NIJ’s Violence Against Indian Women Pilot Study: Select Findings
Alison Brooks, National Institute of Justice
Jane E. Palmer, National Institute of Justice / American University
Christine Crossland, National Institute of Justice
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Discussant:
Ronet Bachman, University of Delaware
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 129: HONEST OPPORTUNITY PROBATION ENFORCEMENT (HOPE): FIDELITY,
PROCESS AND IMPACT EVALUATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
Evaluating the Impact of HOPE Programs: A Demonstration Field Experiment
Doris Layton MacKenzie, Pennsylvania State University
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
Assessing Fidelity and Lessons Learned in HOPE Programs
Susan Brumbaugh, RTI International
Gary Zajac, Pennsylvania State University
109
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Implementation Experiences of Project HOPE with California Parolees
Sharon Ishikawa, University of California, Irvine
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
Decide Your Time: Using Deterrence’s Certainty Principle to Change Behavior
Daniel O'Connell, University of Delaware
Christy Visher, University of Delaware
Grant Bacon, University of Delaware
John Brent, University of Delaware
Karl Hines, Delaware Department of Corrections
Discussant:
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 130: PUTTING RESEARCH INTO PRACTICE: IMPLICATIONS OF RECENT
SENTENCING AND CORRECTIONS REFORMS IN THE STATES
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Brian Elderbroom, Public Safety Performance Project, Pew Center on the States
Time Served and Public Safety: What Have We Gained From The Growth in Length Of Stay?
Felicity Rose, Public Safety Performance Project, Pew Center on the States
Ryan Scott King, Pew Charitable Trusts
The Impact of Post-Release Supervision on Recidivism
Michael Ostermann, Rutgers University
Do Incentive-Based Early Release Programs Achieve Successful Probation Outcomes?
Marie L. Griffin, Arizona State University
John Hepburn, Arizona State University
Discussant:
Brian Elderbroom, Public Safety Performance Project, Pew Center on the States
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 131: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: EFFECTS OF RESTORATIVE JUSTICE
CONFERENCING TEN YEARS ON (ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL
CRIMINOLOGY)
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Heather Strang, Cambridge University / Australian National University
Victims of Property and Violent Crime: Effects of Restorative Justice Ten Years On
Heather Strang, Cambridge University / Australian National University
Restorative Justice and Procedural Justice: Attitudes of Drinking-Drivers Ten Years On
Geoffrey Barnes, University of Pennsylvania
Fatal Consequences: Risk of Death among Violent Offenders Randomly Assigned to Restorative Justice or to Court
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
110
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 132: CRIME AND PLACE: JUVENILE CRIME IN PLACES
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Eveline Hoeben, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Functional Settings of Unstructured Socializing and Adolescent Offending
Eveline Hoeben, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Frank Weerman, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Parenting and Exposure to Criminogenic Settings
Heleen Janssen, NSCR
The Influence of Neighborhood Factors on Juvenile Delinquency
Siny Tsang, University of Virginia
N. Dickon Reppucci, University of Virginia
Examining the Impact of Community-Level Factors and Spatial Dynamics on Individual Delinquency in Harrisburg, PA
Aaron Fingerhut, Temple University
Kelly Waltman-Spreha, Temple University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 133: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON TERRORISM AND POLITICAL VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brandon Behlendorf, University of Maryland
International and Domestic Terrorism, State Capacity, and State Instability
Susan Fahey, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Gary LaFree, University of Maryland
The Effectiveness of Tactics to Reduce Kurdish Terrorist Violence in Turkey
Laura Dugan, University of Maryland
Erica Chenoweth, University of Denver
The Effectiveness of Left Wing Counter-Terrorism Strategies in India: Do They Deter or Backfire?
Sumit Kumar, University of Maryland
The Ties that Bind? Violence and Social Capital in India
Brandon Behlendorf, University of Maryland
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 134: GENDER, RECIDIVISM, AND AUTHORITIES' DECISIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
Predictors of Domestic Violent Recidivism after Release from Prison: Gender, Profiles, and Risk Assessment
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
David E. Olson, Loyola University Chicago
Gipsy Escobar, Loyola University Chicago
Comparing Male and Female Prison Releasees Across Risk Factors and Post-Prison Recidivism
David E. Olson, Loyola University Chicago
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
Gipsy Escobar, Loyola University Chicago
111
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Gendered Discipline: Examining Differences in Disciplinary Infractions between Incarcerated Men and Women
Gipsy Escobar, Loyola University Chicago
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
David E. Olson, Loyola University Chicago
Discussant:
Mary A. Finn, Georgia State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 135: THE SOCIAL THEORY OF MODERNITY AND ITS LEGACIES FOR PUNISHMENT
AND SOCIETY
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Richard Sparks, University of Edinburgh
Missing Link: Toward a Mid-Level Conception of Penal Change
Josh Page, University of Minnesota
Punishment and Technologies of Power
Jonathan Simon, University of California, Berkeley
The Social Psychology of Mass Incarceration
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Advances and Problems in the Comparative Sociology of Punishment
David Garland, New York University
MEETING
SESSION 136: GREEN CRIMINOLOGY WORKING GROUP
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 137: COERCIVE CONFINEMENT IN IRELAND: PATIENTS, PRISONERS, AND
PENITENTS (ORGANIZED BY THE PRISON JOURNAL)
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Authors
Ian O'Donnell, University College Dublin
Eoin O'Sullivan, Trinity College Dublin
Critics
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie Mellon University
Mark Cooney, University of Georgia
SESSION 138: EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT OF VICTIMS AND VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Ryan M. Labrecque, University of Cincinnati
Identifying Victims of Domestic Minor Sex Trafficking: Results from a Screening Process in Juvenile Detention
Emily J. Salisbury, Portland State University
The Empirical Assessment of Human Trafficking: Challenges, Roadblocks, and Barriers
Tonisha Renee Jones, Grand Valley State University
112
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Creation and Validation of the Inmate Risk Assessment for Violent Victimization (IRAVV)
Ryan M. Labrecque, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
John Wooldredge, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 139: POLICING JUVENILES: POLICY, PRACTICE, AND INTERVENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
An Examination of Factors Influencing Inner-City Juveniles’ Perceptions of the Police
Kimberly Hassell, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Tina L. Freiburger, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
The Neighborhood Context of Adolescents’ Encounters with the Police: A Mixed Methods Approach
Daniela Hunold, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Dietrich Oberwittler, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Assessing the Impact of a Local Police Athletic League on Youths and the Community
Kate Chamberlain, North Carolina Department of Correction
Michael O. Maume, University of North Carolina Wilmington
Policing Juveniles: What We Know, What We Don’t Know, and What We Hope to Learn
Garrett Grothoff, University of Cincinnati
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 140: USING QUALITATIVE METHODS IN SENSITIVE RESEARCH SITUATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
LaDonna Long, Roosevelt University
Fact or Fiction, Does it Matter?: Exploring Narrative Meaning in the Sex Offender-Victim Dyad
Brenda K. Vollman, Loyola University New Orleans
Human Trafficking, Measurement Issues, and the "Woozle Effect"
Jonathan Alexander Grubb, Sam Houston State University
Vincent J. Webb, Sam Houston State University
Sex Work Research and Life Event Calendars
Nicolas Trajtenberg, University Udelar, Uruguay
Clara Musto, Universidad de la República, Uruguay
Utilizing the Multi-Method Approach to Understand Sexual Victimization
LaDonna Long, Roosevelt University
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
SESSION 141: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN PROBATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
S. E. Costanza, University of South Alabama
A Community Justice Approach to Probation: Evaluating the NYC New Model of Probation
Kevin Barnes-Ceeney, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Jeff Mellow, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Shenique Thomas, Rutgers University
A Sea of Troubles: Problems Facing the Probation Service in England and Wales
Loraine Gelsthorpe, Cambridge University
George Mair, Liverpool John Moores University
113
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Contemporary Probation Practice and the Control of Crime Opportunities: The Role of Third-Party Actors
Joel Miller, Rutgers University
Kim Copeland, Rutgers University
Mercer Sullivan, Rutgers University
The Contemporary Face of Probation
Shannon Smithey, Westminster College
Kristenne Marie Robison, Westminster College
Jennifer Duvall, Westminster College
Matthew Shiner, Westminster College
SESSION 142: EFFECTS OF INCARCERATION ON OFFENDERS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Timothy Brezina, Georgia State University
Are Prisons Schools of Crime? A Dose-Response Estimate of the Effect of Prison Peers on Reoffending
Heather M. Harris, University of Maryland
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
Kristofer Bret Bucklen, PA Dept. of Corrections / University of Maryland
The Deterrent Effect of Incapacitation: Does Jail or Prison Produce Desired Results?
Christopher Rosbough, Florida State University
The Effects of Imprisonment for Chronic Offenders
André Van der Laan, WODC
Nikolaj Tollenaar, WODC
Punishment and Pessimism: Subjective Consequences of the Revolving Prison Door
Timothy Brezina, Georgia State University
Ellen Ballard, Georgia State University
Charles Hogan, Georgia State University
Erin Marsh, Georgia State University
SESSION 143: RISKY FACILITIES AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
James R. Coldren, Jr., Governors State University
Identifying and Assessing Risky Facilities
Melanie Wellsmith, University of Huddersfield
Can Music Trigger Violent Criminal Victimization? A Study of Jamaican Dance Halls
Carlene Barnaby, Rutgers University
Exploring the Relationship between Drug and Alcohol Treatment Facilities and Violent and Property Crime
Travis A. Taniguchi, Police Foundation
Christopher Salvatore, Montclair State University
From Wall Street to the High Street: The Role of Moral Hazard in Generating Criminogenic Environments
Adrian Beck, University of Leicester
SESSION 144: EMERGING ISSUES IN CRIME POLICY: CRIME CONTROL AND PREVENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michele Covington, Georgia Southern University
Mafia Infiltration of Wall Street: Perception, Enforcement and Control Strategies
Sorle Stanley Diih, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
114
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Punitiveness: Experiences from Germany
Helmut Kury, University of Freiburg
You're Not Welcome Here: The Efficacy of Residency Restrictions for Sexual Predators
Michele Covington, Georgia Southern University
Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida
SESSION 145: CRIME AND PLACE: THE SPATIAL PATTERNS OF CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
George E. Capowich, Loyola University New Orleans
A Test of Ecological Theories of Criminal Offending in South Africa: Analyzing Spatial Variation of Property Crime
Alexandra Hiropoulos, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Jeremy Porter, Brooklyn College, CUNY
Analysis of 10 Years of Police Data on Kidnapping Cases
Neil Hunter, Lancashire Constabulary, UK
Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge / Hebrew University
Relative Deprivation and Offense Location: Can Ecological Characteristics of an Offender’s Neighborhood Predict Where He Offends?
Jon Maskaly, University of South Florida
Alyssa Whitby Chamberlain, Arizona State University
Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida
Testing Social Disorganization Theory with Assessing the Geography of Sex Abuse in Washington D.C.
Jisun Choi, University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 146: ATTITUDES TOWARD CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Amy L. Anderson, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Age, Period, and Cohort Effects of Death Penalty Attitudes in the United States, 1975-2010
Amy L. Anderson, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Robert Lytle, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Philip Schwadel, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Criminal Justice Practitioners' Perceptions of Capital Punishment
Cyndy Caravelis Hughes, Western Carolina University
Matthew Robinson, Appalachian State University
Indiana Citizens' Support for Capital Punishment for Persons Who Are Severely Mentally Ill
Marla Sandys, Indiana University
Sara M. Walsh, Indiana University Southeast
Heather Pruss, Indiana University Bloomington
SESSION 147: CONVICT CRIMINOLOGY: IMPROVING PRISON RESEARCH
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Deirdre Caputo-Levine, SUNY Stony Brook
Mis-Measuring Misconduct: A Content Analysis of Recent Research on Inmate Misconduct
Veronica L. Horowitz, Kean University
The Barren Landscape of Studies on Inmate Culture: The Art of Constructing Human Subjects as Non-Reflexive Objects
Grant Tietjen, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Michael Lenza, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
115
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Discourse of Prison Rape in the Interview Setting: A Review of Literature
Melanie Norwood, University of Illinois at Chicago
Making Them into a Safe Product: Objectification of Formerly Incarcerated African American Men
Deirdre Caputo-Levine, SUNY Stony Brook
SESSION 148: JUVENILE DETENTION ALTERNATIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer L. Lux, University of Cincinnati
Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative: A Pre/Post Comparison in One Jurisdiction
Scott Richard Maggard, Old Dominion University
Pre-Dispositional Juvenile Detention: Predicting Length of Stay before and after JDAI
Allison Taylor Chappell, Old Dominion University
Scott Richard Maggard, Old Dominion University
Jennifer Higgins, Old Dominion University
Assessing the Effectiveness of Multisystemic Therapy: A Meta-Analysis
Jennifer L. Lux, University of Cincinnati
Cheryl Lero Jonson, Northern Kentucky University
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 149: EXPLAINING/UNDERSTANDING MARIJUANA USE
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Derek Kreager, Pennsylvania State University
Health Strains and Subsequent Delinquency and Marijuana Use
Lisa A. Kort-Butler, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
The Effects of Attachment on Juvenile Marijuana Use
Taner Cam, Turkish National Police
Depends Who Offers: Social Proximity and First Time Cannabis Use
Morena Anamali, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Are We Having Fun Yet? Perceptual Change at Marijuana's Onset
Derek Kreager, Pennsylvania State University
Daniel T. Ragan, Pennsylvania State University
SESSION 150: CONTROLLING ENVIRONMENTAL CRIME: PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Carole Gibbs, Michigan State University
Does Environmental Enforcement Slow the Treadmill of Production?
Michael Long, Oklahoma State University
Paul Stretesky, University of Colorado - Denver
Michael Lynch, University of South Florida
The Problem of Policing Cross-Border Environmental Crime
Toine Spapens, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Corporate Environmental Deterrence
Carole Gibbs, Michigan State University
Sally Simpson, University of Maryland
Michael Cassidy, Michigan State University
116
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 151: COURT RESPONSES TO DOMESTIC AND INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE:
PROTECTION ORDERS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Ruth E. Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
"He Said, She Said", the Police Said: Gendered Violence and Domestic Violence Protection Orders
Robin Fitzgerald, The University of Queensland
Heather Douglas, University of Queensland
Modeling Decisions to Issue Protective Orders and the Relationship to Offender Recidivism
Durant H. Frantzen, Texas A&M University - San Antonio
What about the Children? Visitation Conditions in Protection Orders
Ruth E. Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
Susan L. Miller, University of Delaware
Sara Mersch, Delaware Coalition against Domestic Violence
SESSION 152: CROSS-NATIONAL SURVEY ANALYSES OF CRIME-RELATED ISSUES
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Larry Salinger, Arkansas State University - Jonesboro
An Exploratory Examination of the Views on Restorative Justice: A Comparison between Bangladeshi and U.S. College Students
Mahfuzul I. Khondaker, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
O. Oko Elechi, Prairie View A&M University
David N. Baker, Texas Southern University
Shanhe Jiang, University of Toledo
Morris Jenkins, University of Toledo
Attitudes toward Deviant Behavior: Cross-National Evaluation of Opinions toward Suicide
Katharine Boyd, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Hyewon Chung, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Does Context Matter in Cross-Cultural Studies?
Esperanza Camargo, University of Houston - Victoria
International Ties between Japanese and Chinese Criminals
George Kikuchi, California State University, Fresno
SESSION 153: MEDIA, THE INTERNET, AND TERRORISM
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brian Forst, American University
Jihadi Violence
Andreas Armborst, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
An Analysis of Extremist Propaganda on the Internet
Sarah A. Bennett, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Sectarian Bias in Media Reports of Terrorism in Bosnia-Herzegovina
Laurence Armand French, University of New Hampshire
Goran Kovacevic, University of Sarajevo
Nedzad Korajlic, University of Sarajevo
Open Source Data on Terrorism and Gang-Related Violence: How Valid? How Reliable? How Useful?
Yu-Hsu Hsiao, American University
Brian Forst, American University
117
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 154: COMMUNITY DISORDER, DISADVANTAGE, AND FEAR OF CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Amanda Bolton, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Urban Insecurity and Fear of Crime: The Studies of Local Observatory of Security
Carla Sofia Cardoso, University of Porto
Ernesto Fonseca, University of Porto, Portugal
Josefina Maria Castro, University of Porto, Portugal
Cândido da Agra, University of Porto, Portugal
“Rolling Dolo”: The Code of the Street and How Inner-City African-American Male Youth Negotiate Violence in Disadvantaged
Neighborhoods
Joseph Richardson, University of Maryland
The Impact of Secondary Exposure to Violence on Youths’ Fear: The Role of Neighborhood Context
Jodi Lane, University of Florida
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Kelsey Antle, University of Florida
The Importance of both Observed and Perceived Disorder
Ryan Aaron Davenport, University College London
SESSION 155: THE VALIDITY AND RELIABILITY OF EVIDENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mari Pierce, Pennsylvania State University, Beaver
An Empirical Assessment of the Scientific and Constitutional Validity of Transdermal Alcohol Sensors: Misplaced Trust and the
Emerging Paradigm of Non-Corporeal Incapacitation
Suman Kakar, Florida International University
Sanjeev Kuldeep Sirpal, Florida International University
The Determination of Beyond a Reasonable Doubt: Capital Punishment and the Overreliance on Eyewitness Testimony
Chris Rose, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
Victoria Beck, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
The Effects of Biological and Non-Biological Forensic Evidence on Sentencing Outcomes
Brooke E. Mathna, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
The Role of Evidentiary Weight in Judicial Sentencing Decisions: How Evidence affects Post-Conviction Discretion in Burglary and
Assault Cases
Esther Nir, Rutgers University
Elizabeth Griffiths, Rutgers University
SESSION 156: NON-METROPOLITAN POLICING
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ryan Patten, California State University, Chico
Rural Crime and Rural Policing: A Content Analysis Approach
Rochelle E. Cobbs, Mississippi Valley State University / Prairie View A&M University
Agree to Disagree? Discordance in Agency Responses Regarding Campus Safety
Matthew J. Giblin, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Melissa R. Haynes, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
George W. Burruss, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Joseph A. Schafer, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
118
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Race and Policing: New Trends in French Research
Fabien Jobard, CNRS, Cesdip
René Levy, CNRS, Cesdip
The Nature and Extent of Conservation Policing: A Preliminary Examination of Organization, Mission, and Personnel
Ryan Patten, California State University, Chico
Matthew S. Crow, University of West Florida
Tara O'Connor Shelley, Colorado State University
SESSION 157: ROUNDTABLE: APPROACHES TO INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE
COURSEWORK
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Seok Beom Kim, Korean National Police Agency / University of Massachusetts - Lowell
New Approaches to International Criminal Justice Education
Hye Sun Kim, Worcester State University
Discussants:
Hee Jung Lee, Ministry of Justice, South Korea
Byung Jun Cho, Westfield State University
John Tahiliani, Worcester State University
SESSION 158: ROUNDTABLE: BEST PRACTICES AND EMERGING RESEARCH IN
IDENTIFICATION OF HUMAN TRAFFICKING VICTIMS
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Laura Simich, Vera Institute of Justice
Discussants:
Jack McDevitt, Northeastern University
Amy Farrell, Northeastern University
Deborah Gibbs, RTI International
Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky
Hilary Chester, U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops - MRS
Bradley Mitchell, Office for Victims of Crime, U.S. Department of Justice
SESSION 159: ROUNDTABLE: BOKO HARAM: THE EMERGENCE OF AN AL-QAEDA
AFFILIATED TERRORIST GROUP IN NIGERIA
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Evaristus Obinyan, Clark Atlanta University
Discussants:
Charles Ochie, Albany State University
Patrick Ibe, Albany State University
Jonathan Odo, Cameron University, Oklahoma
Charles Ubah, Georgia College & State University
Jovita Esechie, Texas Southern University
Hamin Shabazz, Stevenson University
Ihekwoaba Declan Onwudiwe, Texas Southern University
SESSION 160: ROUNDTABLE: BUILDING (AND THEN CROSSING) BRIDGES: A DISCUSSION OF
MULTI-DISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO THE STUDY OF CORPORATE CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jay Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
119
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Discussants:
Nicole Leeper Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Erin Harbinson, University of Cincinnati
John Boatright, Loyola University Chicago
Juliet Sorensen, Northwestern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 161: STATE AND NATIONAL RESPONSES TO ELDER ABUSE, MISTREATMENT, AND
NEGLECT
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Darakshan Raja, Urban Institute
Where We Stand: Update on Elder Abuse, Mistreatment, and Neglect (EAMN) Legislation
Darakshan Raja, Urban Institute
Kamala Mallik-Kane, The Urban Institute
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
Characteristics of State Adult Protective Services (APS) Agencies: Results from NAPSA’s 2012 Survey of Its Membership
Andrew Capehart, NAPSA
Kamala Mallik-Kane, The Urban Institute
Collaboration and Coordination among Responders to Elder Abuse, Mistreatment, and Neglect
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
Kamala Mallik-Kane, The Urban Institute
Darakshan Raja, Urban Institute
Moving toward a National Elder Abuse, Mistreatment, and Neglect Reporting System
Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Kamala Mallik-Kane, The Urban Institute
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 162: EXPLORING POLICE INTEGRITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
Attitudes Toward Misbehavior and Perceptions of Agency Accountability: Results from the National Police Research Platform
Lorie Ann Fridell, University of South Florida
Ruth Zschoche, University of South Florida
Jack McDevitt, Northeastern University
Exploring Police Integrity in Urban and Rural Environments
Wook Kang, University of Central Oklahoma
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
Studying Police Integrity Across South Africa: A Comparison of the Police Service, Metro, and Traffic Police Officer Levels of Police
Integrity
Adri Sauerman, Michigan State University
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
A Bumpy Road toward Police Integrity: Exploring Attitudes by Croatian Community Policing Officers and Traditional Police Officers
Sanja Kutnjak Ivkovich, Michigan State University
120
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 163: STUDENTS MEET SCHOLARS: QUALITATIVE RESEARCH
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Timothy Dickinson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Discussants:
Rod K. Brunson, Rutgers University
Neal Shover, University of Tennessee
Richard Wright, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Patrick Carr, Rutgers University
Deanna L. Wilkinson, Ohio State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 164: THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF CRIME, POLICING, AND JUSTICE IN NEW YORK
CITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ric Curtis, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Has Crime Bottomed out in NYC?: Youth and Crime in the South Bronx
Dimas Cortez, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Maria Heyaca, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Nicholas Montano, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Laila Alsabahi, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Leonardo Dominguez, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Alyssa Mazzarella, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Training Wheels: Teenage Pimp Archetypes
Sarah Rivera, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Amber Horning, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Anthony Marcus, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Black Male Responses to Experiences with Violence
Douglas Thompkins, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Joshua Eichenbaum, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Efram Thompson, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Lawrence Kelly, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The View from the Back: Offenders’ Views of Police and the Justice System in Red Hook, Brooklyn
Avram Bornstein, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Sarah Rivera, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Ric Curtis, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 165: CONVICT CRIMINOLOGY: POETRY AND PHOTOGRAPHS REFLECTING ON
MASS INCARCERATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robert P. Johnson, American University
Poems and Photographs on Mass Incarceration
Robert P. Johnson, American University
Carla Mavaddat, McGill University
121
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
What We Can Learn from the Poetry of Prisoners
Robert P. Johnson, American University
Alison Brooks, National Institute of Justice
Poetry and Penitence: The Sociology of Prison Poetry and Prison Culture
Michelle Inderbitzin, Oregon State University
Discussants:
Stephen C. Richards, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
John Frana, University of Louisville
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 166: GIRLS IN TROUBLE: GETTING BEYOND THE "BAD GIRLS" RHETORIC
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Carla Cesaroni, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Juvenile Court Intervention with Girls Exposed to Trauma, Abuse, Violence and Loss
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
Julie Yingling, Michigan State University
Tia Stevens, Michigan State University
Understanding Peer-on-Peer Conflict amongst Girls in Pre-Trial Detention
Carla Cesaroni, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Holly Pelvin, University of Toronto
The Help-Seeking Behaviors of Young Women in Trouble with the Law in the Toronto Metropolitan Area
Tia Stevens, Michigan State University
Examining Different Pathways to Girls’ Prostitution in South Korea
Juyoung Song, University of West Georgia
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 167: RESEARCH INFORMING THE RESPONSE TO TRANSNATIONAL ORGANIZED
CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
Exploring the Social Organization and Dynamics of the On-line Black Market
Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
It Came from the North: Estimating the Flow of Methamphetamine and Other Synthetic Drugs from Quebec, Canada
Carlo Morselli, Université de Montréal
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
David Farabee, University of California, Los Angeles
Evaluating and Improving Law Enforcement Cooperation in Combating Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations
Daniel Schneider, American University
Carolyn Gallaher, American University
Janus Awakes? Outbound Anti-Smuggling Enforcement and Advanced Industrial Countries
Richard Friman, Marquette University
Estimating the Links Between Transnational Organized Crime and Terrorism
John Picarelli, National Institute of Justice
Discussant:
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
122
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 168: VIOLENCE AS SITUATIONAL ACTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Chair:
Julie Horney, Pennsylvania State University
Explaining Violent Hotspots: The Question of Selection
Beth Hardie, University of Cambridge
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
Explaining Violent Events: Situational Factors and Mechanisms
Kyle H. Treiber, University of Cambridge
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
The Role of Provocation in Violence: Interviewing the Violent Offender
Neema Trivedi, University of Cambridge
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
Discussant:
Jean McGloin, University of Maryland
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 169: ALCOHOL AND SEXUAL ASSAULT: FINDINGS FROM THE WOMEN’S STRESS
AND SUPPORT STUDY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Women’s Stress and Support Study: Rationale, Sample, and Methods
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
Preliminary Psychometrics of the SRQ and SRQ-Alcohol Measures in the Women’s Stress and Support Study
Mark Relyea, University of Illinois at Chicago
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
Social Support, Perceived Control over Recovery, and Drinking to Cope in a Sample of Sexual Assault Survivors
Liana Peter-Hagene, University of Illinois at Chicago
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
Racial/Ethnic Differences in Disclosure and Support-Seeking in Alcohol versus Non-Alcohol Related Sexual Assaults
Amanda Vasquez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 170: GENDER AND WHITE COLLAR CRIME IN THE 21ST CENTURY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Female Involvement and Gender Gap in Enron-Era Corporate Frauds
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Jennifer Schwartz, Washington State University
Michael Roche, Pennsylvania State University
123
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Gender, Corporate Crime, and Opportunity
Sally Simpson, University of Maryland
Mariel Alper, University of Maryland
Michael Benson, University of Cincinnati
Public Perceptions of White-Collar and Street Crime: Does Gender Really Matter?
Mary Dodge, University of Colorado - Denver
Victoria Van Antwerp, University of Colorado - Denver
Mother Earth and Sky Father: Environmental Crime and Women’s and Men’s Offenses against the Environment
Jennifer Schwartz, Washington State University
Eric Johnson, Washington State University
Joseph Kremer, Washington State University
Discussant:
Peter Yeager, Boston University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 171: REPORT OF THE NAS COMMITTEE ON DETERRENCE AND THE DEATH
PENALTY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Jeremy Travis, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Report of the NAS Committee on Deterrence and the Death Penalty
Daniel Nagin, Carnegie Mellon University
Discussant:
Charles Manski, Northwestern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 172: COMMUNITY-DRIVEN VIOLENCE PREVENTION: OPERATIONAL PITFALLS
AND POLITICAL DILEMMAS ASSOCIATED WITH COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern University
The Politics of ‘Risk’: Competing Discourse in Risk-Oriented Youth and Gang Violence Prevention
Tim Goddard, Florida International University
A Qualitative Study of Citywide Gang Prevention and Intervention Service Coordination
Charlotte Bradstreet, University of California, Irvine
Injustice Frames, Policeability, and the Everyday Construction of Crime
Luis Daniel Gascón, University of California, Irvine
Incongruent Communities: Aligning Neoliberal Fantasy and Reality in South L.A.
Aaron Roussell, University of California, Irvine
Discussant:
Wesley G. Skogan, Northwestern University
RECEPTION
SESSION 173: HANDBOOK OF PUNISHMENT AND SOCIETY RECEPTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
124
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
MEETING
SESSION 174: DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME BOARD MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
AWARD AND LECTURE CEREMONY
SESSION 175: THE JOAN MCCORD AWARD LECTURE AND THE ACADEMY OF
EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY AWARDS CEREMONY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 176: VICTIMS & OFFENDERS EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Montrose 4, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 177: JOURNAL OF QUANTITATIVE CRIMINOLOGY EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chairs:
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 178: LEGAL AND METHODOLOGICAL ANALYSES OF ISSUES FACING COURTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Hank Fradella, California State University, Long Beach
Application of the Marshall Hypothesis to the Three-Strikes Law
Janine Kremling, California State University, San Bernardino
Amy Reckdenwald, University of Central Florida
John K. Cochran, University of South Florida
Drug Testing in Public Schools: How Far Will the Lower Courts Extend Vernonia and Earls?
Michael R. Cavanaugh, University of Houston Downtown
Michael S. Vaughn, Sam Houston State University
Why Courts Reconsider: Parameters of Wrongful Conviction Cases
Claire Angelique R. I. Nolasco, Texas A&M University - San Antonio
Michael S. Vaughn, Sam Houston State University
Chi-Fang (Lily) Tsai, Sam Houston State University
Zombie Cases: Olmstead Lives!
Weston James Morrow, Arizona State University
Hank Fradella, California State University, Long Beach
SESSION 179: CLARIFYING INSTITUTIONAL ANOMIE THEORY: ISSUES OF CONCEPTUAL
CLARITY, RACE, AND GENDER
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Steven Messner, University at Albany, SUNY
An Investigation of the Roles and Measurement of Institutions in Institutional-Anomie Theory
Russell Wolff, Northeastern University
Jacob Stowell, Northeastern University
125
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Race and the American Dream: Can Institutional Anomie Theory Explain Racial Differences in Offending?
Andia Azimi, Georgia State University
Leah Daigle, Georgia State University
Lisa R. Muftić, Georgia State University
Differential Development of Social Institutions in Black and White American Communities: An IAT Discussion
Lish Harris, Dixie State College
Her American Dream: Bringing Gender into Institutional-Anomie Theory
Samantha E. Applin, University at Albany, SUNY
Steven Messner, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 180: STUDENT ATTITUDES TOWARD CRIME AND JUSTICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Hyunseok Jang, Kennesaw State University
The Influence of Interpersonal Contact on Students’ Attitudes
Heath C. Hoffmann, College of Charleston
Tracy Burkett, College of Charleston
George Dickinson, College of Charleston
Cell Phone Policies in Classrooms: A Study About How Policies Impact Student Use
Amanda Porter, Carroll University
Jennifer Huck, Carroll University
Katherine Snow, Carroll University
SESSION 181: DESISTANCE FROM GANGS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Bryan Bubolz, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Blood in Blood Out? Exploring Motives for Gang Desistance
Arna L. Carlock, University at Albany, SUNY
Alan J. Lizotte, University at Albany, SUNY
Desistance from Gangs: The Importance of Disillusionment, Stress, and Identity in the Decision to Change
Bryan Bubolz, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Pathways into and out of Youth Gangs
J. Michael Vecchio, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 182: BEYOND INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL PREDICTORS OF PRISONER REENTRY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
What is the Effectiveness of Correctional Sanctions?
Joshua C. Cochran, Florida State University
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
Bill Bales, Florida State University
School Days: The Promises and Limitations of the University Environment on Reentry
Jennifer Colanese, Indiana University South Bend
Qiang Xu, Indiana University South Bend
A Systematic Analysis of Offender Reentry to Rural Areas
Ingrid Diane Johnson, Temple University
Matthew Hiller, Temple University
Steven Belenko, Temple University
Wayne Welsh, Temple University
126
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Redemption for Reintegrating Prisoners
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie Mellon University
SESSION 183: STUDIES OF NEIGHBORHOOD CULTURE: POLICE LEGITIMACY,
ATTACHMENT, AND REPUTATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Hollianne Marshall, Fairmont State University
Deterrence by Proxy: How Belief in the System of Law Can Deter Crime
Christopher Rosbough, Florida State University
Sense of Community and Adolescents' Drug Abuse
Hua Yan, University of Maryland
“Come Heavy or Not at All": Defended Neighborhoods, Ethnic Concentration and Chicago Robberies -- Examining the ItalianAmerican Mafia Influence
Hollianne Marshall, Fairmont State University
SESSION 184: DATING VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Elizabeth Tomsich, University of Colorado - Denver
An Intersectional Approach to Understanding Dating Abuse from the Perspective of South Asian Muslim Youth
Amanda Couture, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Dating Violence and Risky Behaviors: An Analysis of the International Dating Violence Study
Rachel Morgan, University of Central Florida
Physical and Verbal Adolescent Dating Violence: An Intersectional Approach
Margaret Mahoney, University of Delaware
Katie A. Farina, University of Delaware
“Hookups" and Interpersonal Violence: An Examination of an Urban University Sample
Elizabeth Tomsich, University of Colorado - Denver
Lonnie M. Schaible, University of Colorado - Denver
Callie Marie Rennison, University of Colorado - Denver
Angela R. Gover, University of Colorado - Denver
SESSION 185: EFFECTS OF INCARCERATION ON FAMILIES AND RELATIONSHIPS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kelsey Antle, University of Florida
Does Prison Break Up Relationships? A Longitudinal Study of Cohabitation Outcomes in a Conviction Cohort
Calli Cain, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Jukka Savolainen, University of Nebraska
Everyone “Does the Time”: The Impact of Incarceration on Family Members Left Behind
Barbara H. Zaitzow, Appalachian State University
Incarcerated Families: Inmates' Children, Their Caregivers, and Living with Incarceration
Kelsey Antle, University of Florida
127
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 186: CHILD MALTREATMENT, EXPOSURE TO VIOLENCE, AND VICTIMIZATION:
LIFE COURSE PREDICTORS AND CONSEQUENCES
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Effects of Child Maltreatment on Delinquency and Subsequent Adult Criminality: A Growth Curve Analysis
Henriikka Weir, University of Texas at Dallas
Amanda Russell, University of Texas at Dallas
Robert Morris, University of Texas at Dallas
Bless Me Father for I Have Sinned: The Criminology of the Roman Catholic Priest Sex Abuse Scandal
Michael L. Birzer, Wichita State University
Ryan Alexander, Wichita State University
Exposure to Violence as a Predictor of Girls’ Trajectories of Violence Perpetration
Amy L. Gower, University of Minnesota
Barbara J. McMorris, University of Minnesota
Renee E. Sieving, University of Minnesota
A Comparative Study of Developmental Processes in Victimization and Delinquency
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Graham Ousey, College of William and Mary
Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 187: DISADVANTAGE, COMMUNITY CONTEXT, AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephanie M. Cardwell, University of Alabama at Birmingham
An Examination of How Offenders Obtain Illegal Prescription Drugs: Community and Individual-Level Predictors
Clair Marie White, Arizona State University
Justin Ready, Arizona State University
Charles M. Katz, Arizona State University
Drug Arrests, the Crime Drop, and Changes in Urban Patterns of Disadvantage
Michael Seth Friedson, New York University
The Importance of Time: Communities, Exposure to Poverty, and Crime
Jacob H. Becker, Pennsylvania State University
The Impact of Community Crime on the Context of School Violence and Delinquency
Stephanie M. Cardwell, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Suzanne E. Perumean-Chaney, University of Alabama at Birmingham
SESSION 188: ATTITUDES TOWARD POLICE IN VARYING CONTEXTS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ivan Sun, University of Delaware
Attitudes towards Police Response in Domestic Violence Situations Involving Veterans With Mental Illness
Fred Markowitz, Northern Illinois University
Attitudes toward police corruption and violence in Buenos Aires, Argentina
Nicole Haas, Center for Legal and Social Studies, Buenos Aires
Citizen Assessments of Police in Taiwan
Ivan Sun, University of Delaware
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
128
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Social Bonds and Juveniles' Attitudes toward the Police
Rodney Lamon Lake, Wayne State University
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
Liqun Cao, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
SESSION 189: MISSING DATA
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Chester L. Britt, Northeastern University
A Test of Ignorability for Missing Data Mechanisms
Kevan Galyean, University of Cincinnati
John Wooldredge, University of Cincinnati
Adjusting for Attrition in a Longitudinal Survey of Prisoners: A Demonstration of Multilevel Multiple Imputation
Ian Brunton-Smith, University of Surrey
Four Techniques for Dealing with Missing Data in Criminal Justice
Joshua Benjamin Hill, Tiffin University
SESSION 190: PUBLIC REACTIONS TO CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stacia Gilliard-Matthews, Rutgers University
Acts of Fear: Behavioral Reactions to Fear of Crime
Aubri F. McDonald, University of Illinois at Chicago
William P. McCarty, University of Illinois at Chicago
Fear and Loathing in Washington State
Nahanni Pollard, Douglas College
Johannes Wheeldon, Washington State University
Rebecca Carleton, Simon Fraser University
Identity, Fear of Crime, and Defensive Behavior
Emily K. Asencio, University of Akron
Monica Oliva, University of Akron
Michael Steiner, University of Akron
SESSION 191: EDUCATION AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Danielle A. Tolson, University of Florida
Exploring the Relationship Between Educational Attainment and Crime
Amy Sariti Kamerdze, University of Maryland, College Park
Impact of Academic Tracking on Juvenile Deviance
Wen-Hsu Lin, Academia Sinica, Taiwan
Chin-Chun Yi, Institute of Sociology, Academia Sinica
Re-Introducing the Frustration into Status Frustration Theory
Janelle M. Eliasson-Nannini, Bowling Green State University
Jorge M. Chavez, Bowling Green State University
The Socialization of On-Campus College Deviance
Danielle A. Tolson, University of Florida
129
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 192: THEORETICAL EXPLANATIONS FOR VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Dale Willits, California State University, Bakersfield
Contemporaneous and Lagged Effects of Life Strains on Violence in a Longitudinal Sample of People with Mental Illnesses
Nathan Wong Link, Temple University
Bruce G. Link, Columbia University
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Robert Agnew, Emory University
Intimate Partner Homicide Rates in Chicago between 1988 and 1992: An Application of General Strain Theory
Natalie Jo Johnson, University of North Texas
Youngsters, Violence, and Antisociality
Ragnhild Bjørnebekk, Norwegian Police University College
Individual and Situational Predictors of Aggressive Behavior: A Factorial Survey Examining Micro-Social Explanations for Violence
Dale Willits, California State University, Bakersfield
SESSION 193: THE SOCIAL CONTEXT OF HATE CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Valerie Jenness, University of California, Irvine
The Spread of Mob Violence: An Historical Analysis of Lynchings in Georgia
Andrew Ritchey, Pennsylvania State University
Mattias Smangs, Fordham University
R. Barry Ruback, Pennsylvania State University
Typifying Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity Homicide Events
Jeff Gruenewald, University of Arkansas
Kristin Kelley, University of Arkansas
Antigay Bias Crime: An Examination of Differential Opportunities to Construct Masculinity
Ryan Martz, Michigan State University
Genocide and the Age Distribution of Crime
Hollie Nyseth Brehm, University of Minnesota
Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota
SESSION 194: TYPOLOGIES OF SEX OFFENDING
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Roger Schaefer, Washington State University
Detection Avoidance: A Thematic Approach to Solved and Unsolved Sexual Homicides
Samantha Balemba, Simon Fraser University
Eric Beauregard, Simon Fraser University
Melissa Martineau, Royal Canadian Mounted Police
Estimating the Prevalence and Possible Trends in "Black Swan Homicide"
Timothy Griffin, University of Nevada, Reno
Joshua Williams, University of Nevada
The Collective Nature of Sexual Violence: A Comparative Case Study Analysis of the Former Yugoslavia, Rwanda, and Sierra Leone
Tusty Zohra, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
130
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
What Does the Victim-Offender Relationship Tell Us about Sex Offender Recidivism? The Importance of Specificity When
Determining Risks for Child-Based Sex Offenders
Roger Schaefer, Washington State University
Alex C. Kigerl, Washington State University
Amber Morczek, Washington State University - Pullman
SESSION 195: ISSUES AND DIRECTIONS IN PROGRAM EVALUATION RESEARCH
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Sarah Maureen Manchak, University of Cincinnati
A New Direction for Policy/Program Evaluation: Process-Based Approach and Local Treatment Effect
Chong Min Na, University of Houston - Clear Lake
Measuring Change in Anti-Social Attitudes and Behaviors in Juveniles
Michael J. Tanana, University of Utah
Matthew Davis, University of Utah
Mindy J. Vanderloo, University of Utah
Public Safety Outcome of a Juvenile Detention Assessment Instrument: Issues to Consider
Mahfuzul I. Khondaker, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Evaluating Prison-Based Vocational and Educational Programs: Translating Practice into Evidence-Based Practice
Sarah Maureen Manchak, University of Cincinnati
Angela Estes, University of Cincinnati
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 196: A COMPARATIVE CONSIDERATION OF GANGS AND CRIMINAL GROUPS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
George E. Capowich, Loyola University New Orleans
Gang Investigators' Perceptions of Military-Trained Gang Members in the Southern United States
Carter F. Smith, Austin Peay State University
Organized Criminal Syndicates and Terrorist Group Nexus
Dean C. Alexander, Western Illinois University
Tip of the Iceberg: Slippery Slope from Sanctioned Art to Defacing Graffiti and Organized Youth Gangs in Reykjavik, Iceland?
Laura Lynn Hansen, Western New England University
Cannibalism and Gang Involvement in the Cinematic Lives of Asian Gangsters
Richard Joseph De Caires, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Paul Lankin, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Phillip Shon, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
SESSION 197: RATIONALITY, CHOICE, AND SANCTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Graham Farrell, Simon Fraser University
An Analysis of Individual and Contextual Factors in Ambiguous Standardized Situations
Kendra Nicole Bowen, Tarleton State University
Jennifer J. Roberts, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Eric Kocian, Slippery Rock University
131
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Role of Informal Social Control in the Sanctions-Compliance Nexus
Nicole R. Els, University of Texas at Dallas
John Worrall, University of Texas at Dallas
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Michael Teneyck, University of Texas at Dallas
Vicarious Experiences, Perceived Risk, and Punishment Avoidance Strategies
Isabelle Beaudoin, University of Montreal
Etienne Blais, University of Montreal
The Intuitive Criminal: Choice Theory and Offender Decision-Making
Graham Farrell, Simon Fraser University
Bryan Kinney, Simon Fraser University
Martin Andresen, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 198: IMMIGRATION AND PERCEPTIONS OF CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Eric Stewart, Florida State University
Local Context and Latino Growth: A Multilevel Investigation of Latino Threat and Punitive-Latino Sentiment
Eric Stewart, Florida State University
Ramiro Martinez, Northeastern University
Eric Baumer, Florida State University
Models of Community Violence
Michael J. Coyle, California State University, Chico
Perceived Criminal Threat, Context, and Punitiveness toward Illegal Immigrants
Elizabeth K. Stupi, Florida State University
Ted Chiricos, Florida State University
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
The Rising Latino Population in Mecklenburg County: Is the Criminal Justice System Meeting the Needs of a Changing Population?
Anita N. Blowers, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Jennifer L. Hartman, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Hallie N. Putt, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
SESSION 199: RACE AND PATHWAYS TO DELINQUENCY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Maxine S. Thompson, North Carolina State University
Race, Religion, and Delinquency: Building Social Capital
Lecinda M. Yevchak, Bowling Green State University
Cassady Pitt, Bowling Green State University
The Emergence of Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Health Outcomes in Early Childhood
Thomas L. McNulty, University of Georgia
Paul E. Bellair, Ohio State University
Unpacking Risk Factors for Delinquency for African American Males and Females: Are African Americans a Monolith?
Jessica Ganao, North Carolina Central University
Mundane Extreme Environmental Stress: Extending General Strain Theory's Discussion of Race Discrimination and Delinquency
Stacy De Coster, North Carolina State University
Maxine S. Thompson, North Carolina State University
132
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 200: MEETING HEALTHCARE NEEDS IN COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS SETTINGS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Andrea Cantora, University of Baltimore
A Randomized Controlled Trial of HIV Linkage to Care at Community Corrections
Michael Gordon, Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, MD
Timothy Kinlock, Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, MD
Josiah Rich, The Miriam Hospital, Brown University, Providence RI
Michelle McKenzie, The Miriam Hospital, Brown University, Providence RI
Criminal Justice Outcomes in Homeless Individuals Receiving Behavioral Health Services
Nahama Broner, RTI International
James Trudeau, RTI International
Kelle Barrick, RTI International
Jason Williams, RTI International
Health Conditions among Opioid-Dependent Individuals under Community Supervision
Amy Murphy, George Mason University
Alese Wooditch, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
William Lawson, Howard University
Akbar Broadway, Howard University
Jesus Felizzola, Howard University
Predictors of Being Tested for HIV among Probationers and Parolees
Timothy Kinlock, Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, MD
Michael Gordon, Friends Research Institute, Baltimore, MD
Josiah Rich, The Miriam Hospital, Brown University, Providence RI
Michelle McKenzie, The Miriam Hospital, Brown University, Providence RI
SESSION 201: POLICE APPROACHES AND CITIZEN VIEWS
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Remi Boivin, Université de Montréal
CALEA Accreditation: An Empirical Examination
Mark DeBarr, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Houston Residents’ Perceptions of the Houston Police Department and Red Light Cameras
Ji Seun Sohn, Lindsey Wilson College
I Report, You Record? Variations of Police Crime-Recording Practices in a Large Canadian City
Remi Boivin, Université de Montréal
SESSION 202: ROUNDTABLE: CAN CRIMINOLOGY BE VIEWED AS A TYPE OF APPLIED
ETHICS?
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Human Flourishing and the Role of Total Confinement: Virtue Ethics and Corrections
Bruce A. Arrigo, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Looking for the Ethical in Offender Treatment
Matt Draper, Utah Valley University
In Search of the Ethical: Social Construction and the Phenomenology of the State of Exception in Criminal Justice Practice
David Polizzi, Indiana State University
133
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 203: ROUNDTABLE: CORRECTIONS AND REENTRY
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Examining the Effects of Participation in a Collaborative Network Reentry Program on Recidivism
Michael M. Wehrman, Cabrini College
Individual and Contextual Factors in Explaining Violent Behavior among Prison Inmates
Boram Lee, Kyonggi University, South Korea
Okkyung Yoon, Kyonggi University
Racial and Ethnic Differences in Time Served and Correctional Release
Mindy Bradley, University of Arkansas
Rodney Engen, University of Arkansas
The Impact of Error on Offender Risk Classification
Aaron Ho, Rutgers University
The Role of Inmate Culture in Recidivism
Jessica Marie Grosholz, Emory University
SESSION 204: ROUNDTABLE: COVERAGE OF FEDERAL LAW ENFORCEMENT IN CRIMINAL
JUSTICE CURRICULUM
Wednesday, November 14 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jeff Bumgarner, University of Minnesota, Crookston
Discussants:
Ronald Burns, Texas Christian University
Charles Crawford, Western Michigan University
Julie Barrows, University of Minnesota
Willard M. Oliver, Sam Houston State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 205: CRIME, JUSTICE, AND POLITICS IN THE CITY AS SEEN THROUGH THE WIRE I
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Peter A. Collins, Seattle University
The Compstat Process as Presented in The Wire
Gennaro F. Vito, University of Louisville
And All the Pieces Matter: Reflections on The Wire and the Criminal Justice System
Susan A. Bandes, DePaul University
Representations of Police Culture in The Wire
Peter Parilla, University of St. Thomas
Wendy Wyatt, University of St. Thomas
Without Regard to the Usual Rules
Jonathon A. Cooper, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Jonathan Bolen, University of Nebraska at Omaha
SESSION 206: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: RECONCEPTUALIZING DIVERSITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Robert D. Crutchfield, University of Washington
134
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Discussants:
Rod K. Brunson, Rutgers University
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
Maria B. Velez, University of New Mexico
Robert D. Crutchfield, University of Washington
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 207: INTEGRATING COMMUNITY AND SOCIOCULTURAL CONTEXT INTO
JUVENILE RISK ASSESSMENT
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
William S. Davidson, Michigan State University
Using Risk Prediction Methods that Better Reflect Context
Jodi L. Petersen, Alma College
Triangulating Evidence for Gender-Responsive Risk and Needs Assessment in the Juvenile Justice System: A Mixed Method
Exploration
Valerie Rose Anderson, Michigan State University
Tia Stevens, Michigan State University
Julie Yingling, Michigan State University
William S. Davidson, Michigan State University
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
The Youth Level of Service/Case Management Inventory: Predicting Recidivism for White and Non-White Juvenile Offenders
Ashlee R. Barnes, Michigan State University
Christina A. Campbell, Yale University
Jodi L. Petersen, Alma College
Valerie Rose Anderson, Michigan State University
Eyitayo Onifade, Florida State University
William S. Davidson, Michigan State University
Discussant:
Eyitayo Onifade, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 208: THE IMPACT OF MEDIA ON INDIVIDUAL PERCEPTIONS OF CRIME AND
FORMAL CONTROLS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ophir Sefiha, University of Denver
College Students’ Perceptions of Crime: The Influence of Television and the Internet
Philip Wagner, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Male and Female Perceptions of Teen Sexting
Carly Hilinski-Rosick, Grand Valley State University
Tina L. Freiburger, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Media Reliance and Public Knowledge about Criminal Punishment
Justin T. Pickett, University at Albany, SUNY
Christina Mancini, Florida Atlantic University
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
Marc Gertz, Florida State University
Media, Military and Militarism: What Affects One's Decision to Support War?
Daniel J. Patten, Old Dominion University
135
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 209: FUTURE PATHWAYS FOR THE STUDY OF PEER INFLUENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jean McGloin, University of Maryland
Peers, Partners and Self: A Symbolic Interactionist Perspective on the Criminal Influence Process
Peggy Giordano, Bowling Green State University
Julia Mack, Bowling Green State University
Wendy Manning, Bowling Green State University
Monica Longmore, Bowling Green State University
Age Disparities in Exposure to Violence Across the Neighborhood Context: The Role of Cross-Cohort Socialization
Gregory Zimmerman, Northeastern University
More Complicated than We Thought: Peer Influence from a Social Network Perspective
D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
Discussant:
Jean McGloin, University of Maryland
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 210: RISK TERRAIN MODELING CASE STUDIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Megan Yerxa, Seattle University
Using Risk Terrain Modeling Methods to Assess the Spatial Distribution of Aggravated Assaults at Micro-Level Places Following a
Place-Based Intervention
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
Jonas Baughman, Kansas City Police Department
A Pilot Application of Risk Terrain Modeling: Aggravated Assault in Newark, NJ
Victoria Sytsma, Rutgers University
Using the Risk Terrain Modeling Technique in an Italian City: Applying an Innovative Approach for Preventing Robberies
Marco Dugato, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Evaluating the Predictive Validity of Risk Terrain Modeling with Residential Burglary
Megan Yerxa, Seattle University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 211: MEDIA PRESENTATIONS OF SUBTERRANEAN CULTURAL GROUPS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michele Grillo, Monmouth University
Mad Men in Bib Overalls: Media’s Pornification and Horrification of Rural Culture
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Stephen Muzzatti, Ryerson University
Jospeh F. Donnermeyer, Ohio State University
Life in the Hood: The Female Gangsta Rapper Perspective
Suzanne E. Perumean-Chaney, University of Alabama at Birmingham
136
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Mapping Painted Transgression: The Spectacle of Street Art
Laura Hanson, University of Kent, UK
Foreign Aliens and Criminality: A Content Analysis of News Reports on Deportees from the U.S.
Vaughn Joel Crichlow, Michigan State University
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 212: CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN GREEN CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Elizabeth Bradshaw, Western Michigan University
End of the Line: Tracking the Commodity Chain of the Electronic Waste Industry
Jacquelynn Doyon, Grand Valley State University
Criminogenic Industry Structures: Environmental Harm and the Offshore Oil Drilling Industry
Elizabeth Bradshaw, Western Michigan University
Climate Change Denial, Corporate Criminality, and Cultural Cognition
Ronald Kramer, Western Michigan University
Raymond Joseph Michalowski, Northern Arizona University
Environmental Forensic Studies and Toxic Towns
Rob White, University of Tasmania
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 213: EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE IN EUROPEAN JUVENILE JUSTICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis on the Effects of Young Offender Correctional Treatment Programs in Europe
Johann Koehler, University of Cambridge
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
Thomas David Akoensi, University of Cambridge
David Humphreys, University of Cambridge
Juvenile Justice in Europe: Reform Developments and “Good Practices"
Frieder Duenkel, University of Greifswald
A Survey of Young Offender Rehabilitation Programs in Europe
Leah Hamilton, University of Cambridge
Johann Koehler, University of Cambridge
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
Discussant:
Santiago Redondo, University of Barcelona
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 214: NEW DIRECTIONS IN CRIME AND PUNISHMENT
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ryan D. King, University at Albany, SUNY
The Small World of Murder: Network Exposure and the Risk of Homicide in Chicago
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
137
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Impact of Exposure to Violent Crime on Standardized Test Performance in New York City
Patrick Sharkey, New York University
Ingrid Gould Ellen, New York University
Johanna Lacoe, New York University
Amy Ellen Schwartz, New York University
Incarceration and Population Health in Wealthy Democracies
Christopher Wildeman, Yale University
Time for Crime: Antecedent Events and Hate Crime Offending
Ryan D. King, University at Albany, SUNY
Gretchen M. Sutton, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 215: BIOLOGICAL CORRELATES OF SCHIZOPHRENIA, PSYCHOPATHY, HOMICIDE,
AND AGGRESSION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Robert Schug, California State University, Long Beach
Reduced Amygdala Volumes in Chinese Psychopathic Murderers
Yaling Yang, University of California, Los Angeles
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Reduced Amygdala Volumes in Proactively Aggressive Female Children
Frances Chen, University of Pennsylvania
Cortical Thickness Alterations in Chinese Murderers with Schizophrenia
Robert Schug, California State University, Long Beach
Discussant:
Dustin Pardini, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 216: Yà MIáO ZHù ZHǎNG: HOW CHINA'S “ZEAL” FOR INDUSTRIALIZATION
INVITES WHITE-COLLAR AND CORPORATE CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Henry N. Pontell, University of California, Irvine
The Proliferation and Impact of White-Collar and Corporate Crime in a Rapidly Industrializing China
Pao-Yang Shen, University of California, Irvine
Natasha Pushkarna, University of California, Irvine
Adam Ghazi-Tehrani, University of California, Irvine
Gilbert L. Geis, University of California, Irvine
Henry N. Pontell, University of California, Irvine
The Great Leap Backward: Cultural Revolution, Traumatized Conditions and White-Collar Crime in China
Børge Bakken, University of Hong Kong
Yujing Fun, University of Hong Kong
The Chinese Melamine Scandal: A Case Study in Economic Development and Legal Evolution
Adam Ghazi-Tehrani, University of California, Irvine
How Do You Mend a Broken Environment?: Socio-Political Effects of Pollution from Environmental Crime in China
Natasha Pushkarna, University of California, Irvine
138
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Discussants:
Børge Bakken, University of Hong Kong
Jianhong Liu, University of Macau
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 217: CRIME AND PLACE: EXAMINING CHRONIC NUISANCE REGULATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
John Eck, University of Cincinnati
Chronic Nuisance Ordinances: Problem-Solvers or Panaceas?
Kathleen M. Gallagher, University of Cincinnati
Jay Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
James Frank, University of Cincinnati
John Eck, University of Cincinnati
The Perspective from the Street: Police Perspectives on Chronic Nuisance Ordinances
Jay Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
Kathleen M. Gallagher, University of Cincinnati
Is Knowing Half the Battle? Improving Place Management through Chronic Nuisance Notification
Troy C. Payne, University of Alaska Anchorage
Michelle Arneson, Green Bay Police Department
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 218: APPEARANCE BIAS AS IT OPERATES IN PERCEPTIONS OF CRIME AND
VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Does Physical Appearance of the Victim Matter?
Brenda Sims Blackwell, Georgia State University
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Jennifer Wareham, Wayne State University
Ellen Ballard, Georgia State University
Using Factorial Vignettes to Study the Influence of Physical Appearance
Jennifer Wareham, Wayne State University
Brenda Sims Blackwell, Georgia State University
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Physical Appearance and its Effect on Juvenile Offending and Juvenile Victimization
Brent Teasdale, Georgia State University
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Physical Appearance and its Effect on the Social Control of Crime
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Discussant:
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
139
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 219: A MULTI-SITE STUDY OF THE IMPLICATIONS AND INTERSECTIONS OF
TRAUMA, MENTAL ILLNESS, AND OFFENDING AMONG WOMEN IN JAIL
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Alice Cepeda, University of Southern California
Identifying Complex Treatment Needs: An Examination of the Prevalence of Serious Mental Illness, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and
Substance use Disorders in Women in Jail
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Dana DeHart, University of South Carolina
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Bonnie L. Green, Georgetown University
Priscilla Dass-Brailsford, Georgetown University
Kristine Johnson, Idaho State University
Elizabeth Whalley, University of Colorado
Using Life History Calendars to Identify Risk Trajectories and Dynamics of the Trauma-Offending Link
Dana DeHart, University of South Carolina
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Bonnie L. Green, Georgetown University
Jail Staff Members’ Views on Jailed Women’s Mental Health, Trauma, Offending, Rehabilitation and Reentry
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Dana DeHart, University of South Carolina
Bonnie L. Green, Georgetown University
Discussant:
Alice Cepeda, University of Southern California
MEETING
SESSION 220: HEALTH AND JUSTICE MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 6:30 pm
Clark 1, 7th Floor
AWARD CEREMONY
SESSION 221: HOMICIDE RESEARCH WORKING GROUP 2012 RICHARD & CAROLYN BLOCK
AWARDS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 222: CRIME SCIENCE MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
AWARD CEREMONY
SESSION 223: DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY MEET AND GREET AND
AWARDS CEREMONY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
140
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 224: TEARING DOWN THE STREETS: TEN YEARS ON
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Author
Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christian University
Critics
Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University
Jeffrey Ian Ross, University of Baltimore
Randall Amster, Prescott College, Arizona
Joanna Gilmore, University of Manchester, UK / Queensland University of Technology, Australia
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 225: BREAKING RULES: THE SOCIAL AND SITUATIONAL DYNAMICS OF YOUNG
PEOPLE'S URBAN CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Authors
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
Dietrich Oberwittler, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Kyle H. Treiber, University of Cambridge
Beth Hardie, University of Cambridge
Critics
Paul Brantingham, Simon Fraser University
Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University
Michael R. Gottfredson, University of California, Irvine
Steven Messner, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 226: REPEAT AND POLY-VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jamie Snyder, University of West Florida
Gendered Pathways, Victimization, and Repeat Victimization
Jillian Turanovic, Arizona State University
Travis Pratt, Arizona State University
Michael Reisig, Arizona State University
Risk of Revictimization by Intimate Partner Violence: The Importance of Victim Related Factors
Karlijn Kuijpers, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Women's Experiences with Multiple Abusive Intimate Partners
Amanda Burgess-Proctor, Oakland University
Poly-Victimization among a National Sample of College Students: Prevalence and Risk Factors
Jamie Snyder, University of West Florida
SESSION 227: LEGAL ISSUES AND COURT PROCESSING
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Bradley Stewart Chilton
Booker Effects: Regional Variations in Sentencing Outcomes
Emmanuelle Klossou, Northeastern University
141
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Race, Ethnicity, and Judicial Discretion: Using Quantile Regression to Assess the Impact of United States v. Booker
Jeffrey Nowacki, University of New Mexico
The Impact of Booker and Gall/Kimbrough on Federal Sentencing: The Relationship between Discretion and Sentence Severity
Byungbae Kim, Arizona State University
Mario Cano, Arizona State University
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
Privatizing Criminal Justice by Religious Organizations: Spirituality and Work-Bias after H-T Church v. EEOC (2012)
Bradley Stewart Chilton
Paul Chwialkowski, University of Findlay
SESSION 228: A NUANCED UNDERSTANDING OF VICTIMIZATION: SPECIAL
CIRCUMSTANCES
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Maria T. Kaylen, Indiana University
Angels and Demons: How Disaster Brings Out the Best and the Worst in Human Nature
Clairissa D. Breen, Cazenovia College
Fetal Kidnapping: Reappearance of an Ancient Crime in Present-Day Context
Richard G. Zevitz, Marquette University
Betwixt and between, or Elevated? The Enigma of Multiracial Identification and Criminal Victimization
Michael E. Ezell, Northern Illinois University
Assessing Two Sources of Violence Data: Factors Associated with Reporting to the Police and Presenting to the Emergency Room
among Victims of Serious Violence
Maria T. Kaylen, Indiana University
SESSION 229: APPLYING CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORIES TO PRISONER REENTRY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Carter Hay, Florida State University
An Exploratory Study of the Strain-Crime Relationship among Adult Male Parolees
Nathan C. Lowe, CSG / APPA / University of Kentucky
Carrie Beth Oser, University of Kentucky
Networked and Focused Reentry: Integrating Deterrence, Rehabilitation and Legality for Violent Gang Offenders
Sanjay Marwah, Guilford College
Andrew Henkle, Guilford College
Fatherhood and Incarceration: The Role of Children and Familial Attachment in the Transition from Prison
Nicholas W. Bakken, University of Wisconsin - La Crosse
Christy Visher, University of Delaware
Whitney D. Gunter, Western Michigan University
The Impact of Marriage and Employment on Prisoner Reentry Outcomes: A Test of Social Bond Theory
Kaleena J. Burkes, Florida State University
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Carter Hay, Florida State University
SESSION 230: EMPIRICAL STUDIES OF INMATE DEVIANCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Colby Lynne Valentine, Dominican College
142
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
An Empirical Exploration of the "Pains of Imprisonment" and Serious Prison Misbehavior and Violence
Ann Marie K. Rocheleau, Stonehill College
Analysis of Violence in Washington State Prisons
Kerryn Bell, Eastern Washington University
Dale Lindekugel, Eastern Washington University
Trajectory Groups of Rule-Breaking Behaviors in Japanese Women Prisons
Yoshikazu Yuma, Hyogo University of Teacher Education
Yuichiro Kanazawa, University of Tsukuba
You Are What You Are? A Test of Importation Theory in a Southern Prison
Gavin Lee, Delta State University
Unraveling the Age, Prison Misconduct, and Recidivism Relationship
Colby Lynne Valentine, Dominican College
SESSION 231: CRIME AND IDENTITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew Ball, Queensland University of Technology
Speciesism, Racism, and Sexism: Interconnected Discourses of Oppression
Rochelle Stevenson, University of Windsor
The Global Skinhead: A Cultural Criminological Exploration
Aimee Wodda, University of Illinois at Chicago
Reporting Victimization to LGBTI Police Liaison Services: Comparing Approaches with other ‘Police Auxiliaries’
Matthew Ball, Queensland University of Technology
Angela Dwyer, Queensland University of Technology
SESSION 232: CHILDREN AT RISK FOR VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rebecca D. Pfeffer, Northeastern University
Victimization of "Left Behind" Children in Rural China
Xiaojin Chen, Tulane University
Prevalence of Violent Victimization within a Sample of Hispanic Adolescents
Holly Ventura Miller, University of Texas at San Antonio
Kristina M. Lopez, Texas State University
J. Mitchell Miller, University of Texas at San Antonio
A Whole New Kind of Naive: The Autistic Child, Risk, and Maltreatment
Rebecca D. Pfeffer, Northeastern University
SESSION 233: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON CRIME PREVENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Tonisha Renee Jones, Grand Valley State University
Crime Prevention and Neoliberal Penalty in Post-Apartheid South Africa
Gail Super, University of Cape Town
Technology and Crime Prevention Strategies: The Polish Platform for Homeland Security as a Unique Example
Emil W. Plywaczewski, University of Bialystok, Poland
143
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Implementing Peacemaking Circles in European Countries: Insights from a Research Study Funded by the EU
Beate Ehret, University of Tuebingen
Elmar Weitekamp, University of Tuebingen
An Appetite for Extinction: Costa Rican Sea Turtles Pay the Price
Beth Adubato, Rutgers University
SESSION 234: INTEGRATED THEORETICAL APPROACHES TO CRIME ACROSS THE LIFE
COURSE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew Robinson, Appalachian State University
Supported and Coerced? A Cross-Site Investigation of the Effects of Social Support and Coercion on Criminal Probability
Olena Antonaccio, University of Miami
Charles R. Tittle, North Carolina State University
Jonathan R. Brauer, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Coercion, Social Support, and Self-Efficacy: Exploring the Relationships with Crime
Christopher E. Bruell, Northeastern University
All About the Context: Moving from Causes to the Complexity of Criminal Behavior
Matthew Robinson, Appalachian State University
SESSION 235: FEAR OF CRIME: CONTEXTUAL CONSIDERATIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jan W. de Keijser, Leiden University
Fear and Safety in the Context of a Community-Oriented Court
Robert Brown, Fayetteville State University
Cherie Ames, Fayetteville State University
Fear of Hate Crime Victimization: A Cross-National Perspective
Rhonda R. Dobbs, University of Texas at Arlington
Courtney A. Waid-Lindberg, Bemidji State University
Tara O'Connor Shelley, Colorado State University
Steven Kohm, University of Winnipeg
Michael Weinrath, University of Winnipeg
Population Growth, Economic Conditions, and Perceived Criminal Threat
Xia Wang, Arizona State University
The Effect of Community Wide Disaster on Perceptions of Collective Efficacy and Safety: A Longitudinal Analysis
Suzanna Ramirez, University of Queensland
Emma Antrobus, University of Queensland
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
SESSION 236: VICTIMS OF INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Maha Hilal, American University
The Human-Animal Bond between Domestically Abused Women and Their Companion Animals
Matthew Atherton, California State University, San Marcos
Debbie McBride, California State University, San Marcos
The Intersections of Race, Class and Gender in Domestic Violence and the Courtroom
Geneva Brown, Valparaiso University
144
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
What Can We Learn? Examining Intimate Partner Violence Service Provision in the Deaf Community
Catherine Cerulli, University of Rochester Medical Center
Jeanna M. Mastrocinque, University of Rochester Medical Center
Nancy Chin, University of Rochester
Denise Thew, University of Rochester
Robert Pollard, University of Rochester Medical Center
Silence Kills: Muslim Women and Intimate Partner Violence
Maha Hilal, American University
Darakshan Raja, Urban Institute
SESSION 237: THE MARGINALIZED AND THE LAW IN CROSS-NATIONAL SETTINGS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Landon Shane Bevier, University of Tennessee
One-Size Neoinstitutionalism Doesn’t Fit All: Why Criminal Justice System Development in Bangladesh Isn’t Working
Kristina Lugo, American University
Fighting Crime in "Borderless" Societies: Examples of European and Australian Police Cooperation
Saskia Maria Hufnagel, Griffith University, Australia
Immigrants’ Confidence in Police: Do Country-Level Characteristics Matter?
Sylwia Janina Piatkowska, University at Albany, SUNY
It’s Not Just Happening Here, Right?
Amanda L. Farrell, Old Dominion University
Mona J. Danner, Old Dominion University
SESSION 238: LIFE COURSE THEORY
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew Larson, Arizona State University
Great Unmet Expectations: The Impact of Adolescent Educational Expectations on Deviant Behavior during the Transition to
Adulthood
Patrick Cundiff, Pennsylvania State University
The Transmission of Alcohol Use from Parent to Child: A Life-Course Perspective
Andrea Roxanne Krieg, Bowling Green State University
Untangling the Ties That Bind: Marriage, Marital Transitions, and Recidivism
Matthew Larson, Arizona State University
Danielle Wallace, Arizona State University
SESSION 239: BURGLARS AND TARGET SELECTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jeffrey J. Roth, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
A New Approach to Offender Profiling: Creating a Profile of Burglars Using Latent Class Analysis
Bryanna Hahn, University of Cambridge
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
What Burglars Said about Entry and Search
Seungmug (Zech) Lee, Western Illinois University
Why One Home and Not Another? An Analysis of Burglars’ Target Selection
Jeffrey J. Roth, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer J. Roberts, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
145
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 240: TOWARD A BETTER UNDERSTANDING OF TERRORIST BEHAVIOR
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Carson, University of Central Missouri
Complexity Model for Knowledge-Managed Policing of Violent Extremism
Geoff Dean, Queensland University of Technology
Examining the Relationship between General Social Survey (GSS) Measures and Far-Right Ideological Violence: A County-Level
Analysis
Steven Chermak, Michigan State University
Joshua Freilich, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Amy Adamczyk, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
William Parkin, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Temporal Patterns of Precursor Criminal Conduct among American Terrorists
Brent Lamar Smith, University of Arkansas
Kelly R. Damphousse, University of Oklahoma
Paxton Roberts, University of Arkansas
The Effects of Criminal Incidents Perpetrated by Members of Radical Environmental and Animal Rights Groups
Hillary Deann McNeel, University of Central Missouri
Jennifer Carson, University of Central Missouri
SESSION 241: UNDERSTANDING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN ARRESTS, SEARCHES, AND
SEIZURES
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jeff Rojek, University of South Carolina
A Multilevel Test of Focal Concerns Theory and the Decision to Arrest
Steven Briggs, University of Northern Iowa
Xavier Escandell, University of Northern Iowa
A Multilevel Analysis of Police Traffic Stop Outcomes: Black’s Theory Revisited
Hee Sub Shim, Sam Houston State University
Hyeyoung Lim, Western Illinois University
Hoon Lee, Western Carolina University
Further Exploration of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Search and Seizure Rates in Arizona: Geographical and Organizational
Influences
Jeffrey E. Clutter, University of Cincinnati
Jessica Eley, University of Cincinnati
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
Jennifer Calnon Cherkauskas, University of Cincinnati
Racial Threat and the Impact of the Broader Metropolis on Racial Disparities in Arrest: 1970-2010
Brian J. Stults, Florida State University
State Immigration Laws and Local Law Enforcement
Justin Nix, University of South Carolina
Jeff Rojek, University of South Carolina
Robert J. Kaminski, University of South Carolina
SESSION 242: ISSUES IN FEDERAL SENTENCING: MANDATORY MINIMUMS AND
CITIZENSHIP STATUS
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Dyan McGuire, Saint Louis University
146
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Sentencing Departures for Mandatory Minimum Defendants: A Longitudinal Examination of Prosecutorial Discretion in Federal Court
Mario Cano, Arizona State University
The Context of Control: Punishment, Citizenship Status, and 9/11
Michael T. Light, Pennsylvania State University
Michael Massoglia, University of Wisconsin
“We Have Got Enough Criminals in the United States without Importing Any”: An Examination of the Influence of National Origin
among Latino Subgroups in Federal Sentencing Outcomes
Mercedes Valadez, Arizona State University
Legal Environment and Judicial Discretion: The Effect of Mandatory Minimum Penalties on Federal Sentencing in Drug Trafficking
Cases
Celesta Albonetti, University of Iowa
SESSION 243: ACADEMIC AND PRACTITIONER COLLABORATIONS IN CRIMINAL JUSTICE
EDUCATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Charisse T.M. Coston, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Cold Case Development: Combining Law Enforcement Agencies and Academia
Rachel Rados, University of Central Florida
Jay Corzine, University of Central Florida
Sustaining Student Retention through Pracademics
Charles J. Kocher, Cumberland County College
Patricia M. Griffin, Saint Joseph's University
Darren K. Stocker, Cumberland County College
Team Teaching the Management and Supervision of Special Offenders: An Alternative Approach to College Instruction
Cathryn Lavery, Iona College
David Mulcahy, Iona College
SESSION 244: INMATE AND ENVIRONMENTAL INFLUENCES ON PRISONER
MALADJUSTMENT
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Benjamin Steiner, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Examining the Association between Treatment Exposure and Disorders on Institutional Misconduct
Kimberly A. Houser, Temple University
Prison Violence, Gangs, and Organizational Characteristics in Ohio Prisons
Brian R. Kowalski, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Brian Martin, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction
Assessing the Relationship between Exposure to Different Types of Violence and Inmate Mental Health
Benjamin Meade, University of South Carolina
Benjamin Steiner, University of Nebraska at Omaha
SESSION 245: EVALUATING PRISONER REENTRY PROGRAMS II
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Zachary Hamilton, Washington State University
Social Support Oriented Reentry Programs: Results from a Randomized Controlled Pilot Trial
Carrie Pettus-Davis, Washington University in St. Louis
Matthew Owen Howard, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
147
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Discharge Planning Alumni Interviews: Why DP Doesn't Reduce Recidivism
Marissa Levy, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Christine Tartaro, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Family Strengthening Project: A Prisoner Reentry Project Addressing the Needs of the Whole Family
Ebony Ruhland, University of Minnesota
Sarah Lageson, University of Minnesota
Evaluation of Washington State’s Earned Release Date Housing Voucher Program
Zachary Hamilton, Washington State University
Zachary Hays, Washington State University
Alex C. Kigerl, Washington State University
SESSION 246: POLICE CONTACT, GUN CARRYING, AND HUMAN TRAFFICKING
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Aysel Allahverdiyeva, University College Dublin
The Roles of Self-Control and Delinquency as Predictors of Police Contact
Angelyne E. Martiniuc, University of Cincinnati
Gregory D. Morris, California State University, Stanislaus
The Walk, not the Talk: Behavioral Cues for Gun Carrying
Nathan Meehan, Naval Research Laboratory
Theoretical Framework on Policing Responses to Human Trafficking: Perspectives of a Victim-Centered Approach
Aysel Allahverdiyeva, University College Dublin
SESSION 247: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGY, THE BODY, AND MASS VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jon Shute, University of Manchester
Towards a Criminology of the Body and Mass Violence
Jon Shute, University of Manchester
Discussants:
David Charles Brotherton, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Alex Alvarez, Northern Arizona University
John Hagan, Northwestern University
SESSION 248: ROUNDTABLE: CHANGING CONSEQUENCES OF A CRIMINAL CONVICTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Bill Hebenton, University of Manchester, UK
U.S., U.K., and E.U. Strategies for Preventing Convicted Sex Offenders from Working with Children
Dimitra Blitsa, New York University
Public Knowledge and Past Convictions: Revisiting Policy "Reforms"
Bill Hebenton, University of Manchester, UK
A Comparison of U.S. and European Law and Policy on Employment Discrimination Based on Criminal Record
Jim Jacobs, New York University
Elena Larrauri, Pompeu Fabra University, Spain
The Road to Hell is Paved with Good Intentions: A Case Study of Prior Criminal Record and 'Redemption'
Keith Soothill, Lancaster University, UK
Criminal Records across Borders
Terry Thomas, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK
148
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 249: ROUNDTABLE: CRITICAL APPROACHES TO STUDYING TREATMENT AND
PROGRESSIVE ALTERNATIVES FOR INTERVENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Elliott Currie, University of California, Irvine
Julie Beck, California State University, East Bay
Tim Goddard, Florida International University
Randy Myers, Old Dominion University
Ken Cruz, University of California, Irvine
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
SESSION 250: ROUNDTABLE: CORRUPTION IN HIGHER EDUCATION WITHIN THE FORMER
YUGOSLAVIA
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Laurence Armand French, University of New Hampshire
Academic Standards in Law and Justice Programs in Serbia
Lidija Nikolic-Novakovic, University of Novi Pazar - Serbia
The Political Hurdles in Creating New Faculties in Serbia
Vojislav Jovic, Independent Police Consultant
SESSION 251: ROUNDTABLE: CRIME AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN DISASTER
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kelly Frailing, Texas A&M International University
Fear, Prosocial Behavior, and Looting: The Katrina Experience
Kelly Frailing, Texas A&M International University
Dee Wood Harper, Loyola University New Orleans
Disaster Rape: Vulnerability of Women to Sexual Assaults during Hurricane Katrina
William Thornton, Loyola University New Orleans
Lydia Voigt, Loyola University New Orleans
Fraud in the Wake of Disasters
Kelly Frailing, Texas A&M International University
The Actions of the Criminal Justice System as a Disaster Precipitant: The 1992 Los Angeles Riot
Komanduri Murty, Fort Valley State University
Julian Roebuck, Clark Atlanta University (Retired)
Managing the Aftermath of the Mumbai Terrorist Attacks
Arvind Verma, Indiana University Bloomington
Rebuilding and Reframing: Nonprofit Organizations Respond to Hurricane Katrina
Pamela Jenkins, University of New Orleans
Bethany Brown, Loyola University New Orleans
SESSION 252: ROUNDTABLE: A SCHOOL-BASED MENTORING PROGRAM: FIRST YEAR
EVALUATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
A School-Based Mentoring Program: First Year Evaluation
Huan Gao, California State University, Stanislaus
Discussant:
Mengyan Dai, Old Dominion University
149
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 253: OFFENDER INTERVENTION AND EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICE
Wednesday, November 14 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gabrielle Lynn Chapman, Vanderbilt University
State Progress in Implementing Proven Programs for Juvenile Offenders
Peter Greenwood, Advancing EBP
Brandon C. Welsh, Northeastern University
Who Dominates? The Influence of Interest Groups on Criminal Justice Policy-Making
Shelby Ann McKinzey, University of Colorado - Boulder
Does Gender-Specific Programming Work? Findings from a Meta-Analysis
Amaia Iratzoqui, Florida State University
Alana Van Gundy-Yoder, Miami University
Effects of Intervention Programs for Adult Offenders on Criminogenic Needs and Recidivism
Gabrielle Lynn Chapman, Vanderbilt University
Mark W. Lipsey, Vanderbilt University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 254: CRIME, JUSTICE, AND POLITICS IN THE CITY AS SEEN THROUGH THE WIRE
II
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Peter A. Collins, Seattle University
Injustice, Emotions and West Baltimore Collectives
Stephen K. Rice, Seattle University
“Way Down in the Hole”: Systemic Urban Inequality and the Wire
Anmol Chaddha, Harvard University
The War on Drugs through The Wire’s Looking Glass
Jennifer M. Balboni, Curry College
“One Of Those At-Risk Children”: Adolescent Development, Juvenile Delinquency, and System Response in the Wire
James McCafferty, University of Cincinnati
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Discussant:
Lauren Block, Washington State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 255: MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE: AFTERMATH OF WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Adina M. Thompson, University of Florida
The Expungement Myth
Amy Shlosberg, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Evan Mandery, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Valerie West, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Psychological Consequences of Wrongful Conviction
Zieva D. Konvisser, Fielding Graduate University
150
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Examining Correlates of Exoneree Re-Entry Outcomes
Adina M. Thompson, University of Florida
Lora M. Levett, University of Florida
Discussant:
Saundra Westervelt, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
SESSION 256: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: JUGGLING PARENTHOOD AND ACADEMIA
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Tracy Sohoni, University of Maryland, College Park
Discussants:
Charis Kubrin, University of California, Irvine
John M. MacDonald, University of Pennsylvania
Constance Chapple, University of Oklahoma
Gary Sweeten, Arizona State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 257: IMPLEMENTING HOPE (HONEST OPPORTUNITY PROBATION ENFORCEMENT)
IN DIFFERENT JURISDICTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Angela Hawken, Pepperdine University
Implementation of HOPE in a Rural County
Livingston Sutro, Cochise County Adult Probation Department
Washington State Program for High-Risk Parolees
Bernard Warner, Washington State Department of Corrections
Implementation of HOPE for Juveniles
Gay Lockling, Yavapai County, AZ, Juvenile Court
Discussant:
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 258: BLUEPRINTS FOR GANG PREVENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Blueprints for Gang Prevention: A Pilot Study
Brook Kearley, University of Maryland
Molly Slothower,, University of Maryland
Denise Gottfredson, University of Maryland
Blueprints for Gang Prevention Pilot Study: Notes from the Field
Whytnee Foriest, University of Maryland
Denise Gottfredson, University of Maryland
151
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Gang Resistance Education and Training (G.R.E.A.T.) Program: Results from a Multi-Site, Randomized Control Trial
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Dana Peterson, University at Albany, SUNY
Terrance J. Taylor, University of Missouri - St. Louis
D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 259: COVERING THE COURTS: MEDIA CONTENT AND STRATEGIES TO
COMMUNICATE OUTCOMES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Marcus Antonio Galeste, Arizona State University
U.S. Supreme Court Decisions on Criminal Procedure in the News: A Study of the Washington Post, New York Times, and USA
Today
Kevin Glenn Buckler, University of Texas at Brownsville
Judicial Public Relations: The Strategic Use of the Media to Communicate Decisions about Criminal Law
Sara Ann Grove, Shippensburg University
Making Sense of Terrorism: Popular Responses to a Federal Trial
Robert T. Cadigan, Boston University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 260: CRIME AND JUSTICE IN ENTERTAINMENT MEDIA
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rose Johnson Bigler, Curry College
Affixing Hollywood Film to a Surveillant Assemblage: Video Surveillance Images of Crime and Criminals in Major Motion Pictures
Jolina Scalia, University of Windsor
Randy K. Lippert, University of Windsor
Differences in the Portrayal of Male and Female Roles in Crime and Justice Television Dramas
Kelsey Deabler, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Candice Batton, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Reality Television, Privacy, and Surveillance
Lisa Marie Kruse, Western Michigan University
Greg Howard, Western Michigan University
Representations of Youth Deviance in American Rural Communities: A Film and Television Analysis
Alison Fyfe, McGill University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 261: CULTURAL CRIMINOLOGY OF THE RURAL
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
Framing Mountain Top Removal: Cultural Representations of Environmental Harm in Appalachia
William McClanahan, Eastern Kentucky University
152
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
To Understand the Living, You Got to Commune with the Dead: A Historical Analysis of a Prison Cemetery
Franklin T. Wilson, Indiana State University
The Steep Steps into the Contemporary Criminality of Southern Appalachia
Edward L.W. Green, Kansas State University
Living on the Wrong Side of Town: Toward a Cultural Criminology of the Rural
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 262: CRIMINOLOGY, CAUSALITY, AND PUBLIC POLICY
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Thomas G. Blomberg, Florida State University
Criminology, Causality, and Public Policy
Thomas G. Blomberg, Florida State University
Karen Mann, Florida State University
Julie Mestre, Florida State University
Family Influences on Crime and Policy Implications
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
Reducing Crime and Imprisonment through Policing
Daniel Nagin, Carnegie Mellon University
Supermax Prisons as Policy: The State of Evidence
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 263: RESPONDING TO THE NEEDS OF VICTIMS IN CASES OF WRONGFUL
CONVICTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Seri Irazola, ICF International
Victim Experiences of Wrongful Conviction
Seri Irazola, ICF International
Erin Williamson, ICF International
Emily Niedzwiecki, ICF International
Sara Ann Debus-Sherrill, ICF International
Impact of Wrongful Conviction: Needs and Experiences of the Exonerated
Emily West, Innocence Project
Stephen Saloom, The Innocence Project
Angela Amel, The Innocence Project
Picking Cotton
Jennifer Thompson-Cannino, Co-author: Picking Cotton
153
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 264: PSYCHOPATHIC TRAITS AND EMPATHY IN CHILD AND ADOLESCENT TWINS
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
The Heritability of Empathy in 14-16 Year-Old Twins
Devika Dhamija, University of Southern California
Catherine Tuvblad, University of Southern California
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Laura A. Baker, University of Southern California
Trajectories of Callous Unemotional Traits in Children and Peer Victimization in Adolescence
Nathalie Fontaine, Indiana University
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Eamon J. P. McCrory, University College London
Essi Viding, University College London / King's College London
The Relationship between Psychopathic Personality and Skin Conductance Orienting Response is explained by Common Genetic
Influences in 14 to 16 Year-Old Twins
Catherine Tuvblad, University of Southern California
Yu Gao, Brooklyn College, CUNY
Serena Bezdjian, University of Southern California
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Laura A. Baker, University of Southern California
Genetic Correlations between EEG Patterns and Externalizing Behavior Problems in Childhood
Shanon Niv, University of Southern California
Catherine Tuvblad, University of Southern California
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Laura A. Baker, University of Southern California
Discussant:
Laura A. Baker, University of Southern California
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 265: SCALING-UP CRIME PREVENTION INITIATIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Ross James Homel, Griffith University
A State Model for Scaling-Up Evidence-Based Youth Crime Prevention
Brian K. Bumbarger, Pennsylvania State University
Prevention Delivery Systems in Disadvantaged Communities: Lessons from the Pathways to Prevention Project
Ross James Homel, Griffith University
Kate Freiberg, Griffith University
Sara Branch, Griffith University
Preventing Youth Sexual Violence and Abuse in Remote Australian Indigenous Communities
Stephen Smallbone, Griffith University
Sue Rayment-McHugh, Griffith University
Dimity Smith, Griffith University
Discussant:
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
154
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 266: INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH ON THE NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXT OF CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Zainab Latif, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Crime, Social Networks, and Public Level Controls: Untangling the Relationship between Spatial Segregation and Crime in Belo
Horizonte, Brazil
Corinne Davis Rodrigues, Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Measuring Social Disorganization in Latin America: Are U.S.-Based Measures Exportable?
Gipsy Escobar, Loyola University Chicago
Neighborhoods and Urban Safety in Accra, Ghana: An Examination of Collective Efficacy in Sub-Saharan Africa
Michael Parks, Pennsylvania State University
Design and Use of Indicators of Violence against Women: Jamaica, Nigeria and Sierra Leone
Andres F. Rengifo, Rutgers University
Todd Foglesong, Harvard University
Social Disorganization and Political Participation in Karachi, Pakistan
Zainab Latif, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Discussant:
James Lynch, Bureau of Justice Statistics
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 267: CRIME AND PLACE: PLACE-BASED POLICE STRATEGIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Hassan Aden, Alexandria Police Department (VA)
A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of Problem-Oriented Policing in Violent Hot Spots
George E. Capowich, Loyola University New Orleans
An Application of Foraging Theory to Explain "Crackdown Decay" during a Hot Spots Experiment
Evan T. Sorg, Temple University
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
Jerry H. Ratcliffe, Temple University
Place-Level Impact of Police Legitimacy Interventions: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Angela Michelle Higginson, University of Queensland
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
Jenna Thompson, University of Queensland
Crime Reduction Initiative Areas: Organizational Challenges to Implementing Criminal Hotspots
Hassan Aden, Alexandria Police Department (VA)
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 268: WANT DATA? WE GOT IT! INFORMATION ON AND ACCESS TO OJJDP’S
JUVENILE JUSTICE DATA COLLECTIONS
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Charles Puzzanchera, National Center for Juvenile Justice
155
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
National Juvenile Court Data
Melissa Sickmund, National Center for Juvenile Justice
Charles Puzzanchera, National Center for Juvenile Justice
National Juvenile Corrections Data
Steve Simoncini, U.S. Census Bureau
Josh Giunta, U.S. Census Bureau, Governments Division, Criminal Justice Statistics Branch
Andrea Sedlak, Westat
National Juvenile Probation Data
Liz Quinn, Westat
Discussant:
Brecht Donoghue, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 269: BAILING OUT: THE USE OF BAIL AND PRE-TRIAL DETENTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Nicole Marie Myers, University of Toronto
Considering Conditions: What’s the Difference between Bail and Probation Conditions?
Jane B. Sprott, Ryerson University
What Does the Courtroom Workgroup Say about Bail?
Brian Chad Starks, University of Delaware
Different Systems, Similar Problems: The Use of Bail and Pre-Trial Detention for Adults and Youths
Nicole Marie Myers, University of Toronto
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 270: IN MEMORY OF ROSLYN MURASKIN: SCHOLAR, ADVOCATE, TEACHER, AND
MENTOR
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Natalie Sokoloff, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Discussants:
Venessa Garcia, Kean University
Stacy Mallicoat, California State University, Fullerton
Jill Rosenbaum, California State University, Fullerton
Janice Joseph, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Toni DuPont-Morales, California State University, Fresno
Bruce McBride, Utica College
RECEPTION
SESSION 271: PRETRIAL JUSTICE INSTITUTE AND URBAN INSTITUTE RECEPTION
HONORING PROFESSOR JOHN GOLDKAMP, THE 2012 AUGUST VOLLMER AWARD WINNER
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
RECEPTION
SESSION 272: HOMICIDE RESEARCH WORKING GROUP RECEPTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
156
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
AWARD CEREMONY
SESSION 273: CELEBRATING THE RECIPIENT OF THE 2013 STOCKHOLM PRIZE IN
CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 274: ASSOCIATION OF CHINESE CRIMINOLOGY & CRIMINAL JUSTICE GENERAL
MEETING
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 275: DISCOVERY OF HIDDEN CRIME: SELF-REPORT DELINQUENCY SURVEYS IN
CRIMINAL POLICY CONTEXT
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Chair:
Jukka Savolainen, University of Nebraska
Author
Janne Kivivuori, National Research Institute of Legal Policy - Finland
Critics
Marvin D. Krohn, University of Florida
Nicole Rafter, Northeastern University
Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota
Discussant:
James F. Short, Jr., Washington State University
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 276: 5 GRAMS: CRACK COCAINE, RAP MUSIC, AND THE WAR ON DRUGS
(ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME)
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Author
Dimitri Bogazianos, California State University, Sacramento
Critics
Katheryn Russell-Brown, University of Florida
Wilson Palacios, University of South Florida
Douglas Thompkins, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Stephanie Bush-Baskette, Rutgers University
SESSION 277: BULLYING: PATTERNS AND CONSEQUENCES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Ryan Randa, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
Bullying in College: How it Connects to Deviance, Crime, and Past Bullying Experiences
Jennifer Huck, Carroll University
Melissa Edwards, Carroll University
157
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Predicting Victimization by School Bullying
SeokJin Jeong, University of Texas at Arlington
Byongook Moon, University of Texas at San Antonio
Dae-Hoon Kwak, Illinois State University
Perceptions and Experiences of Bullying By Victims’ Race and Ethnicity
Sarah A. El Sayed, University of Texas at Dallas
Nadine Connell, University of Texas at Dallas
Do Victims Resort to Tendencies of Their Bullies? An Examination of Aggression among Victims of Psychological and Physical
Bullying
Michelle D. Mioduszewski, Loyola University Chicago
Loretta J. Stalans, Loyola University Chicago
The Consequences of Bullying and Cyberbullying: School Avoidance Behaviors of Students from a National Sample
Ryan Randa, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
Brad Reyns, Weber State University
Billy Henson, Shippensburg University
SESSION 278: RACE ISSUES IN CONTEMPORARY CRIMINOLOGY
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Deena Isom, Emory University
Black Violence, White Violence: Crime and Racialization
Jeanette Covington, Rutgers University
Collective Efficacy and Fear of Crime: An Exploratory Study of Race/Ethnicity Effects
Sean Varano, Roger Williams University
Marc Swatt, MLS Applied Statistics, LLC
Craig Uchida, Justice & Security Strategies
Shellie Solomon, Justice & Security Strategies
The Effect of Race and Gender in Federal Sentencing
Kevin Blackwell, U.S. Sentencing Commission
The Racialized Gender Gap
Deena Isom, Emory University
SESSION 279: COLLECTIVE BEHAVIOR AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Alfredo Verde, University of Genoa, Italy
Structuring Aggression: Involvement in Combat Sports and Adult Criminality
Ryan Williams, University of Illinois Springfield
Jonathan Perrine, University of Illinois Springfield
Ealing Calling: Riot in the Queen of London’s Suburbs
Kevin Martin Stenson, University of Kent / London Metropolitan University
Deviance and Crimes in Submarine Warfare during World Wars I and II
Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Hebrew University
A Qualitative Research on Italian Soccer "Ultras": Social Reaction and the Construction of Identity
Alfredo Verde, University of Genoa, Italy
Nicolò Knechtlin, Psychologist
158
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 280: INMATE EXPERIENCES: FINDINGS FROM PROJECTS AND QUALITATIVE
STUDIES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Paul Sutton, San Diego State University
Anything Can Become Ordinary: Women Doing Life
Lora Bex Lempert, University of Michigan - Dearborn
Are Prison Masculinities Racialized?: The Experience in Two Men's Prisons in England
Coretta Phillips, London School of Economics and Political Science
Bars to Walls: Inmate Art Expressions (Prison Art in Kentucky)
Katharine Leigh Salomon, University of Louisville
The Write Path to Reform: Inmate Essays on Life and Crime
Paul Sutton, San Diego State University
Lori Sutton, San Diego State University
SESSION 281: IMMIGRATION AND MARGINALITY
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
Family Functioning and Delinquency across Immigrant Generations: A Gendered Examination
Jaclyn Cwick, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Stephanie Di Pietro, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Foreign Minors and Deviance: A Self-Report Survey in the Secondary Schools of Emilia Romagna
Ester Massa, University of Bologna
Stefania Crocitti, University of Bologna, Italy
Dario Melossi, University of Bologna
Multiple Marginality and Gang Membership: A Prospective Assessment
Gregory Drake, Michigan State University
Chris Melde, Michigan State University
Social Mobility and Crime: Case-Study Interviews with 2nd Generation Immigrants
Gregory Yerashotis, University of Toronto
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
SESSION 282: EXAMINING THE COLLATERAL EFFECTS OF INCARCERATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brianna Remster, Pennsylvania State University
Incarceration and HIV: Interruptions in the Continuity-of-Care
Holly Swan, University of Delaware
Incarceration and the Transition to Residential Independence
Cody Warner, Pennsylvania State University
Brianna Remster, Pennsylvania State University
The Impact of Incarceration and Military Combat on Marital Dissolution
Leslie Abell, Pennsylvania State University
Incarceration and Homelessness: Pathways from Prison to Shelter
Brianna Remster, Pennsylvania State University
159
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 283: CRIMINAL JUSTICE PERCEPTIONS: CRITICAL APPRAISALS
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Keith Atterberry, University of Illinois at Chicago
Willing to Engage: Exploring How Police Treatment and Societal Discrimination Affect Engagement with Legal Institutions
Carolyn T. Greene, Athabasca University
Mahdi Qasqas, Athabasca University
Government Cynicism and Criminal Justice Attitudes
Brian Renauer, Portland State University
Citizen Cooperation with Formal Authorities: A Product of Shared Values or Necessity?
Linzie Nicole Jones, University of Queensland
Suzanna Ramirez, University of Queensland
Kristina Murphy, Griffith University
Pastoral Correctionalism: Power and Agency in Justice Institutions
Chrysanthi Leon, University of Delaware
Public Attitudes toward Closed-Circuit Television Surveillance in Chicago
Keith Atterberry, University of Illinois at Chicago
SESSION 284: JUVENILE RISK ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENTATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kristin Winokur Early, Justice Research Center
Examining the Validity of the Structured Assessment of Violence Risk in Youth (SAVRY) for Predicting Probation Outcomes among
Adjudicated Juvenile Offenders
Kristina Childs, University of Central Florida
John Ryals, Jefferson Parish Department of Juvenile Services
Paul Frick, University of New Orleans
Policy in Practice: An Evaluation of the Florida Juvenile Detention Risk Assessment Instrument (DRAI)
Katherine A. Taylor, Florida State University / Florida Department of Juvenile Justice
Predictive Validity of the Florida Positive Achievement Change Tool (PACT) Risk Assessment Instrument: An Examination of the
Influence of Dispositional Placement and Individual Criminal and Social History Indicators
Kristin Winokur Early, Justice Research Center
Michael Baglivio, Florida Department of Juvenile Justice
Julia Blankenship, Justice Research Center
SESSION 285: PRISON POPULATION AND THEORY EVALUATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Carlos E. Monteiro, Northeastern University
Life Strains, Negative Emotionality, and Institutional Acclimatization: An Application of Agnew’s General Strain Theory to Examine
the “Strains” of Imprisonment for Incarcerated Serious Young Offenders in British Columbia, Canada
Adrienne M. F. Peters, Simon Fraser University
Raymond R. Corrado, Simon Fraser University
Overriding the Security Classification Instrument: Prison Misconduct and Mandatory Minimum Placements in California
Sarah Tahamont, University of California, Berkeley
When Prisons Fail to Deter: On the Role of Self-Efficacy in Diminishing Intentions to Reoffend
Lacey Schaefer, University of Cincinnati
Jennifer L. Lux, University of Cincinnati
160
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
GST: A Model for Understanding Prison Misconduct
Carlos E. Monteiro, Northeastern University
SESSION 286: SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON OFFENDING AND VICTIMIZATION
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jason Manning, West Virginia University
"Would You Like To Move Away From This Neighborhood?": Strain and Sexual Assault in Adolescents
Maja Vlajnic, University of Maryland, College Park
Conditioning and Pathway: How Victimization is Translated into Delinquency
Yu Zhang, Northeastern University
Lives of Street-Based Youth: Understanding Social Exclusion and Social Bonds of Runaway Teens
Edward G. Weeks, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Linda M. Williams, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Toward a Theory of Predatory Mimicry
Jason Manning, West Virginia University
SESSION 287: DEFINING AND RESPONDING TO WHITE-COLLAR LAW BREAKING
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jurg Gerber, Sam Houston State University
Revisiting the Sutherland-Tappan Debate through Purdue Pharma and OxyContin
O. Hayden Griffin, III, University of Southern Mississippi
Measuring the Federal Response to White Collar Law Breaking
Mark Motivans, U.S. Department of Justice
Middle-Class Offenders: A Danger to Employers or a Danger to the Public?
Keith Soothill, Lancaster University, UK
Brian Francis, Lancaster University, UK
Les Humphreys, Lancaster University, UK
The Declining Significance of the Criminal Law
Richard Dean Moran, Mount Holyoke College
Austin Moran Federa, Lawrence University
SESSION 288: THE GENDERED NATURE OF INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE: FEMALE
PERPETRATION AND MUTUAL VIOLENCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Janice Clifford, Auburn University
Female Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence in Heterosexual Relationships: A Pilot Study
Desiré J. M. Anastasia, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Shaping Personal Narratives: The Impact of Social Discourses on Women Arrested as Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence
Devon Thacker Thomas, University of Colorado - Boulder
Escalation/De-Escalation within Violent Interactions between Intimate Partners
Alexandra Lysova, University of Toronto
Rosemary Gartner, University of Toronto
The Dynamics of Female Domestic Violence Offending
Janice Clifford, Auburn University
161
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SESSION 289: EXTRALEGAL FACTORS AND FEDERAL SENTENCING OUTCOMES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jill Kathleen Doerner, University of Rhode Island
Gender and Social Control: Examining the Federal Justice Process for Women Offenders
Danielle M. Rousseau, Northeastern University
Prosecutorial and (or) Judicial Bias in Federal Drug Cases? Decomposing the Effects of Race and Gender on Sentence Length
Jeffrey T. Ward, University of Texas at San Antonio
Richard D. Hartley, University of Texas at San Antonio
Rob Tillyer, University of Texas at San Antonio
Race and Cumulative Disadvantage in the Federal Justice System
Brian Johnson, University of Maryland
The Interaction of Gender and Race/Ethnicity on Sentencing Outcomes
Jill Kathleen Doerner, University of Rhode Island
SESSION 290: STUDIES IN DRUGS AND CRIME
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Craig Rivera, Niagara University
A Meta-Analysis of Alcohol Use and Intoxication Rate Study Findings among Homicide Offenders
Joe Kuhns, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Lyn Exum, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Tammatha Clodfelter, Appalachian State University
Martha Bottia Noguera, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Intergenerational Continuity of Drug Use
Sara Simmons, Sam Houston State University
Kelly Knight, Sam Houston State University
Scott Menard, Sam Houston State University
Preliminary Analysis of the Impaired Driving Assessment for Community Corrections
Kenneth W. Wanberg, Center for Addictions Research and Evaluation
Nathan C. Lowe, CSG / APPA / University of Kentucky
Matthew DeMichele, Pennsylvania State University
David S. Timken, Center for Impaired Driving Research and Evaluation
Bath Salts and Spice: Patterns of Use
Dina Perrone, California State University, Long Beach
Randi Helgesen, California State University, Long Beach
Ryan Fischer, California State University, Long Beach
Religiosity and Marijuana Use: An Examination of Dimensions of Religious Faith
Craig Rivera, Niagara University
Michael Cretacci, Buffalo State College
SESSION 291: COMMUNITY PREVENTION AND GOVERNANCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Aviva M. Rich-Shea, Massasoit Community College
Community Risk and Protective Factors for Delinquency: The Contemporary Context
Michael P. Brown, Ball State University
162
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
Toward a New Model of Action Research Aimed at Community Capacity Building
Dawn M. Irlbeck, Creighton University
John Crank, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Rebecca Murray, Creighton University
Cop Out, Cry Out, or Collaborate? Neighborhood Residents' Coping Strategies and the Negotiation of Order
Connie M. Koski, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Willingness to Raise (WTR) and the New Volunteer-Partnership-Model (VPM)
Samuel Chibuike Arungwa, Prairie View A&M University
G. Solomon Osho, Prairie View A&M University
SESSION 292: POLICE AUTHORITY AND USE OF FORCE
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
J. Andrew Hansen, University of South Carolina
Florida v. Jardines and Canine Sniffs: “Frankie, I Don't Know What I'm Gonna Find”
Tad W. Hughes, Southern Police Institute
Gun Violence Directed at Law Enforcement Officers
David M. Bierie, United States Marshals Service
Sarah Welchans Craun, United States Marshals Service
Paul J. Detar, United States Marshals Service
The Influence of Agency Policy on Conducted Energy Devices (CED) Use Rates
Frank V. Ferdik, University of South Carolina
Robert J. Kaminski, University of South Carolina
Jeff Rojek, University of South Carolina
Mikaela Cooney, University of South Carolina
Characteristics of Officer Involved Vehicle Crashes
J. Andrew Hansen, University of South Carolina
Jeff Rojek, University of South Carolina
Geoffrey P. Alpert, University of South Carolina
Allison Rojek, University of South Carolina
SESSION 293: ROUNDTABLE: SHOULD ACJS AND ASC MERGE?
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Todd Clear, Rutgers University - Newark
Discussants:
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Craig Hemmens, Missouri State University
Mary Katherine Stohr, Missouri State University
SESSION 294: ROUNDTABLE: CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY: CULTURAL AND CRITICAL
PERSPECTIVES
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Anomic Suicide: A Durkheimian Analysis of European Normlessness
Omi Hodwitz, University of Maryland
Kathleen Frey, University of Maryland
Conflict Theory: A Keeper!
Denise Ruth Woodall, University of Miami
Queer(ing) Criminology
Emy Backlin, Stockholm University
163
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Cultural Lives of Art and Crime: A Laboratory for Exploratory Cultural Criminology
Paul Kaplan, San Diego State University
Brian Goeltzenleuchter, Contraposto
“No Cops, No Courts”: Violent Anti-Fascist Confrontations as Autonomous Criminological Praxis
Stanislav Vysotsky, Willamette University
SESSION 295: ROUNDTABLE: CRIME, GENDER, AND FEMINISM
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kerry Carrington, Queensland University of Technology
Discussants:
Kerry Carrington, Queensland University of Technology
Mona J. Danner, Old Dominion University
Jodi Death, Queensland University of Technology
Nancy A. Wonders, Northern Arizona University
SESSION 296: ROUNDTABLE: CRIME POLICY AND PUBLIC SAFETY
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Innovative Public Prosecution Policy in Addressing Common Misdemeanors
Mirjam Siesling, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
Neighborhoods, Collective Efficacy, and the Case for Micro-Neighborhoods
Manne Gerell, Malmo University, Sweden
Youth Awareness, Understanding, and Deterrence: An Educational and Preventative Approach to Sentencing and Incarceration of
Youth
Karen Miner-Romanoff, Franklin University
Music, Musicians, and Barroom Aggression
James C. Roberts, University of Scranton
SESSION 297: CORRELATES OF IMMIGRATION AND OFFENDING
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Ineke Haen Marshall, Northeastern University
Crime and Latin American Immigrant Communities: The Role of Cultural Traditions in Building Collective Efficacy
Maya Pagni Barak, American University
Foreign Born Inmates Released from the Los Angeles County Jail: A Preliminary Look at Rearrest Nine Years Later
Jennifer S. Wong, Simon Fraser University
Laura J. Hickman, Portland State University
Marika Suttorp Booth, RAND Corporation
Stephanie Moore, Portland State University
Investigation of Neighborhood Occupational Structure and Immigrant Concentration as Correlates of Crime Rates
Feodor A. Gostjev, University of Miami
Measuring Immigration Effects and Ethnic Enclaves
Margaret Hardy, University of Maryland
Bianca Bersani, University of Massachusetts Boston
SESSION 298: PARENTAL INCARCERATION AND OFFENDING ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
Wednesday, November 14 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Heather M. Washington, University at Albany, SUNY
164
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
The Gendered Effects of Parental Incarceration on Adult Offending Outcomes
Heidi Lyons, Oakland University
Amanda Burgess-Proctor, Oakland University
Beth M. Huebner, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Effects of Parental Incarceration on Offspring’s Criminal Justice and Mental Health Outcomes
Molly Buchanan, University of Florida
Paternal Incarceration and Children's Behavior: Understanding the Role of Children's Perceptions of the Father-Child Relationship
Heather M. Washington, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 299: ASC AWARDS PLENARY
Wednesday, November 14 - 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
ASC Minority Fellowship Recipients:
Christopher P. Dum, University at Albany, SUNY
Alana J. Gunn, University of Chicago
Jay P. Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
Gene Carte Student Paper Award Recipients:
Sarah Brayne, Princeton University
Man-Kit Lei, The University of Georgia
Noah Painter-Davis, Penn State University
Naomi F. Sugie, Princeton University
Teaching Award:
TBA
Ruth Shonle Cavan Young Scholar Award (Sponsored by Pearson):
Andrew V. Papachristos, Yale University
Min Xie, Arizona State University
Outstanding Article Award Recipients:
Ben Feldmeyer, University of Tennessee
Casey T. Harris, University of Arkansas
Darrell J. Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University
Theresa Morris, Trinity College
Harland Preshel, Texas A&M University
Michael J. Hindelang Book Award:
David W. Garland, New York University
ASC Fellows:
Scott H. Decker, Arizona State University
Marvin D. Krohn, University of Florida
Mark Warr, University of Texas at Austin
Herbert Bloch Award:
Julie Horney, Penn State University
August Vollmer Award:
John S. Goldkamp, Temple University
Thorsten Sellin and Sheldon and Eleanor Glueck Award:
Marc Le Blanc, Universite de Montreal
Edwin H. Sutherland Award and Address:
David W. Garland, New York University
Address: American Penality and the American State
165
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14
SOCIAL
SESSION 300: ASC OPENING SOCIAL
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
SESSION 300: RON AKERS AND HIS BLUEGRASS BAND
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 pm to 10:00 pm
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
SOCIAL
SESSION 301: DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME SOCIAL
Wednesday, November 14 - 8:00 pm to 9:30 pm
The Gage Restaurant (24 S. Michigan Ave.)
Chair:
Amy D'Unger, Georgia Tech
RECEPTION
SESSION 302: UNIVERSITY OF NEBRASKA AT OMAHA RECEPTION
Wednesday, November 14 - 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
166
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
MEETING
SESSION 303: DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME BREAKFAST
Thursday, November 15 - 7:30 am to 9:00 am
Adams Room, 6th Floor
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 304: BULLYING AND OFFENDING
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Peter Lovegrove, University of Virginia
The Links between School Climate and Cyberbullying and Sexting
Justin Patchin, University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire
Sameer Hinduja, Florida Atlantic University
Does Bullying Involvement Predict Arrest Rates among Early Adolescents?: Results from a 2-year Longitudinal Study
Dorothy Espelage, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Lisa De La Rue, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Joseph Ryan, University of Michigan
Psychological Factors Associated with Bully Perpetration and Victimization among Students with Disabilities
Chad Rose, Sam Houston State University
Cynthia Simpson, Houston Baptist University
Middle School Sibling and Peer Bullying: Relationships with Individual and Family Factors
Ryan Sinclair, Wichita State University
Sabina Low, Wichita State University
Erin Thompson, Wichita State University
Discussant:
Peter Lovegrove, University of Virginia
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 305: MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE: BROADENING METHODOLOGY IN INNOCENCE
RESEARCH
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
Studying False Guilty Pleas
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
Determinants of Innocence: Statistical Modeling of Exoneration Case Data
Kobi A. Abayomi, Georgia Institute of Technology
Innocent Differences? An Empirical Study of Wrongful Convictions vs. "Near Misses"
Jon B. Gould, American University
Richard Leo, University of San Francisco
Julia Carrano, American University
Proficiency Tests to Estimate Error Rates in the Forensic Sciences
Jonathan J. Koehler, Northwestern University
167
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 306: TRADITIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME IN THE MODERN WORLD I
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Henk Van de Bunt, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Italian Mafias’ Asymmetries
Ernesto Savona, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Vory v Zakone: Russian Organized Crime?
Dina Siegel, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Organized Crime in Nigeria
Obi N. I. Ebbe, University of Tennessee
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 307: VISUAL CULTURE AND THE ICONOGRAPHY OF CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Eamonn Carrabine, University of Essex
Visual Criminology and Carceral Studies
Michelle Brown, University of Tennessee
Seeing Things: Violence, Voyeurism, and the Camera
Eamonn Carrabine, University of Essex
Discussants:
Nicole Rafter, Northeastern University
Judah Nathan Schept, Eastern Kentucky University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 308: CRIME AND PLACE: WILDLIFE CRIME - THE IMPORTANCE OF PLACE AND
CONTEXT
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Andrew Lemieux, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
The Spatial Choices Poachers Make
Andrew Lemieux, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
A Qualitative Perspective on How the Illegal Parrot Trade Operates
Stephen F. Pires, Florida International University
Can Situational Crime Prevention Help Solve Leopard Poaching Driven by Human-Wildlife Conflict in South Africa?
Julie Viollaz, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
The Thin Green Line: Results from Participant Observations and Interviews of Rangers in Queen Elizabeth National Park, Uganda
William Moreto, Rutgers University
168
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 309: DISADVANTAGE, NEIGHBORHOOD AND INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE:
RESEARCH UNDERWAY BY FACULTY AFFILIATED WITH THE EMORY CENTER FOR
INJURY CONTROL (ECIC)
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Monica H. Swahn, Georgia State University
Academic and Community Partnerships: Vision and Priorities for Reducing Violence in Vulnerable and Disadvantaged Populations
Debra Houry, Emory University
Shakiyla Smith, Emory University
Monica H. Swahn, Georgia State University
Lisa Dawson, Georgia Department of Community Health
James Griffin, Morehouse School of Medicine
Sheryl Heron, Emory University
Relationship between Injustice and Violent Acts
Heather L. Scheuerman, Towson University
Violence Victimization and Perpetration among Youth in the Slums of Kampala, Uganda
Monica H. Swahn, Georgia State University
Lindsay Gressard, Georgia State University
Jane Palmier, Georgia State University
Rogers Kasirye, Uganda Youth Development Link
Catherine Lynch, Duke University
Huang Yao, Georgia State University
Prior Experience Living in Disadvantaged Neighborhoods Moderates the Effect of Alcohol on Aggression
Peter Giancola, University of Kentucky
Volkan Topalli, Georgia State University
Monica H. Swahn, Georgia State University
Ralph Tarter, University of Pittsburgh
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 310: UNDERSTANDING THE 2011 ENGLISH RIOTS
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and Political Science
Three Days in August
Betsy Stanko, Metropolitan Police, London
How the 2011 London Disorder Cemented Londoners' Views of the Police
Katrin Hohl, London School of Economics and Political Science
Betsy Stanko, Metropolitan Police, London
Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and Political Science
Reading the 2011 Riots
Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and Political Science
Why Did the Riots Occur Here but Not There? A Random Utility Model of the U.K. Riots
Shane Johnson, University College London
Peter Baudains, University College London
169
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 311: MEASURING CRIME AGAINST BUSINESS AT THE CROSS-NATIONAL LEVEL:
GOOD PRACTICES, RECENT EXPERIENCES AND FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Henry N. Pontell, University of California, Irvine
Crimes against Business in the UK
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Crime against Business in Switzerland
Giang Ly Isenring, University of Zurich
Giulia Mugellini, University of Zurich
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
EU Survey to Assess the Level and Impact of Crimes against Business: A Pilot Study
Robert Manchin, Gallup Europe
Marco Dugato, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Measuring Crime against Business in Latin America: From the Mexican Experience to a Future Regional Survey
Edgar Vielma, Centre of Excellence INEGI-UNODC
Oscar Jaimes, National Institute of Statistics and Geography (INEGI-Mexico)
Giulia Mugellini, University of Zurich
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 312: CRIME AND VICTIMIZATION IN SOUTH KOREA
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Seong min Park, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Community Variations in Disorderly Behavior, Crime Victimization, and Fear of Crime: The Role of Collective Efficacy in Korea
EuiGab Hwang, Kyonggi University
Yumi Lee, Kyonggi University
Sungil Han, Kyonggi University
Women’s Fear of Crime in Korea: Test of the Sexual Assault Shadow Hypothesis
Ha-neul Kim, Kyonggi University
Ramhee Kim, Kyonggi University
Suhong Min, Kyonggi University
Development of Self-Control and Gender
Youngoh Jo, Sam Houston State University
Leana Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
An Examination of Juvenile Repeat Victimization in South Korea: Bayesian Predictive Analysis of Korean Juvenile Panel Data
Seong min Park, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Hyoungah Park, Rutgers University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 313: CRIME, POLICING AND CORRECTIONS IN THE RURAL CONTEXT
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lindsay Kowalski, Pennsylvania State University
170
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Who Shot the Sheriff? State Police Coverage of Rural Municipalities in Pennsylvania
Joseph Blackburn, Blackburn Strategies
Lindsay Kowalski, Pennsylvania State University
Ronald Smeal, Smeal Consulting
Gary Zajac, Pennsylvania State University
Unearthing Crime Impacts of Economic Boom Towns: Evidence from Marcellus Shale Drilling in Pennsylvania
Lindsay Kowalski, Pennsylvania State University
Gary Zajac, Pennsylvania State University
Rural County Jails: Operations and Evidence-Based Practices
Gary Zajac, Pennsylvania State University
Lindsay Kowalski, Pennsylvania State University
Discussant:
Doris Layton MacKenzie, Pennsylvania State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 314: A RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL TESTING THE EFFECTS OF THE TASER
ON COGNITIVE FUNCTIONING
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michael D. White, Arizona State University
Social Science Research with Risk: The Challenges of Designing a Study to Test the Effects of TASER Exposure on Cognitive
Functioning
Michael D. White, Arizona State University
Examining the Effects of TASER Exposure on Cognitive Functioning in a Sample of Police Officers: Results from a Pilot Study
Robert J. Kane, University of Baltimore
The Moral Boundaries of Experimentation in Criminology: The Arizona State University TASER Experiment
Justin Ready, Arizona State University
Discussant:
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
AWARD MEETING
SESSION 315: DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING ANNUAL BUSINESS/AWARDS
BREAKFAST MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
SESSION 316: POLICE AND COMMUNITIES
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brandon Louis Bang, Washington State University
Beyond Dystopias: Towards a More Nuanced Understanding of How the Poorest of the Poor are Regulated in America
Mike Rowan, New York University / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Modern Policing, Racialized Subject Formation, and State Regulation: Case Study of the South Bronx
Zhandarka Kurti, SUNY Binghamton
The Contours of Supervisors’ Perceptions and Attitudes on Police Misbehavior
Hyeyoung Lim, Western Illinois University
Hoon Lee, Western Carolina University
171
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Policing Mormon Fundamentalist Communities: Why the Traditional Police Approach is Ineffective
Brandon Louis Bang, Washington State University
SESSION 317: JUSTICE SYSTEM STAKEHOLDERS AND THE CREATION OF DELINQUENCY
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sherree R.B. Davis, Fayetteville State University
Exercising Discretion: Impact of Legal and Extra-Legal Factors on Officers’ Decisions to Divert Young Offenders
Simon Little, Griffith University
Troy Allard, Griffith University
Anna Stewart, Griffith University
Early Confessions and Justice Outcomes for Juveniles: Is Confession Good for the Soul?
Kristin Johnson Gardner, University of Florida
Lonn Lanza-Kaduce, University of Florida
The Negative Consequences of Police Contact for Gang Youth
Stephanie Wiley, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Juvenile Detention Decisions: A Focal Concerns Perspective
Sherree R.B. Davis, Fayetteville State University
Angela Taylor, Fayetteville State University
Lori Guevara, Fayetteville State University
SESSION 318: PROPERTY, FRAUD, AND CYBER VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Amanda Bolton, University of Missouri - St. Louis
The Walls Are Closing In: The Impact of Gated Communities on Property Crime Victimization Risk
Nicholas Branic, University of California, Irvine
Wesley Jennings, University of South Florida
Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida
Ráchael Powers, University of South Florida
Other People Using Your Money: Risk Factors for Identity Fraud Victimization in the Netherlands
Johan van Wilsem, Leiden University
Broken Windows in Cyberspace: Exploring the Effects of "Digital Disorder" on Computer Crime Victimization and Fear of Online
Crime
Amanda Bolton, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 319: NEW ADVANCES IN CYBERSECURITY
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Alline Pedra Jorge Birol, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil
An Analysis of Recent Attempts to Protect Intellectual Property on the Internet
Douglas E. Salane, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Evan Misshula, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Cybercrime and Anarchy: Finding the Way Out
Frances Bernat, Texas A&M International University
Frontier Justice in Virtual Spaces: Illegal and Extralegal Social Control Online
Sara M. Walsh, Indiana University Southeast
172
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Addressing the Disconnection between Technological Advances and Human Practices Regarding Computer Security
Camille Gibson, Prairie View A&M University
Janice Shields, Prairie View A&M University
Keirra Caldwell, Prairie View A&M University
SESSION 320: MARRIAGE, ROMANTIC RELATIONSHIPS, AND DESISTANCE
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Christopher Salvatore, Montclair State University
The Good Marriage Effect among Recent Cohorts
Matthew VanEseltine, Bowling Green State University
Adolescent Romantic Relationship Status and "Maturing Out" of Crime?
Meredith Worthen, University of Oklahoma
Lisa Murphy, La Sierra University
Relationship Typologies and Female Offending: A Life Course Analysis
Emily Ann Hayden, Kentucky Wesleyan College
The Influence of Marriage and Parenthood on Emerging Adults' Drug Use
Christopher Salvatore, Montclair State University
SESSION 321: THE HUMAN FACE OF COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS: HOW PEOPLE MATTER
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Colanese, Indiana University South Bend
An Examination of the Role of the Community Supervision Officer in Changing Offender Behavior
Myrinda Schweitzer, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
Angela Estes, University of Cincinnati
Risking Trust: The Development of Working Relationships between Released Sex Offenders and their Parole Officers
Leon Digard, University of Cambridge
The Value of Positive Relationships: Clients Report on the Effectiveness of a Day Reporting Center for More Success in Re-Integration
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
Morry Ulrich, St. Leonard's Society
What about Nonprogrammatic Factors? Women’s Perceptions of Staff, Relationships, and Environment in a Community Corrections
Setting
Andrea Cantora, University of Baltimore
SESSION 322: SCALING AND MEASUREMENT
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
John P. Hoffmann, Brigham Young University
A Review of Better Practices for Risk Scale Validation
William Dieterich, Northpointe Inc.
William L. Oliver, Northpointe Inc.
Tim Brennan, Northpointe Inc.
Beyond Projection: Specifying the Types of Peer Delinquency Misperception at the Item- and Scale-Levels
John H. Boman, University of Florida
Jeffrey T. Ward, University of Texas at San Antonio
173
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Proper Measurement of Anti-Gay Attitudes
Kevin D. Cannon, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Pamela Denise Cobb, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Validation of the Delinquency Index: Youth Report against the Rasch Measurement Model
Nora Wikoff, Washington University in St. Louis
SESSION 323: UNDERSTANDING FEAR OF CRIME IN DIVERSE CONTEXTS
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Justin Nicholas Crowl, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Crime Talk and the Criminological Impact of Mining Work Camps
Kerry Carrington, Queensland University of Technology
Crosstalk between Fear of Crime, Personality and Emotions: Exploring Individual Differences in Fear of Crime
Inês Sousa Guedes, Universidade do Porto, Portugal
Carla Sofia Cardoso, University of Porto
Delinquency Professionals: The Influence, Extension and Adoption of the Culture of Control
Kyle J.D. Mulrooney, Kent University
Neighborhood Environment, Perceived Risk of Victimization, and Fear of Crime in Seoul, South Korea: An Empirical Assessment
Jason Yong-Eun Sung, Rutgers University
Kyung-shick Choi, Bridgewater State University
SESSION 324: FAMILY PROCESSES AND DELINQUENCY
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Glen Ishoy, University of West Georgia
Family Size and Delinquency: A Comprehensive Examination
Joshua Kuch, Florida State University
Daniel P. Mears, Florida State University
Sonja Siennick, Florida State University
Family Structure, Gender, and Later Life Problems
Kristin Mack, University of Northern Iowa
Michael Leiber, University of South Florida
Jennifer Peck, University of South Florida
Using Baumrind's Typology to Examine the Effects of Parenting Style on College-Aged Women
Jason Spraitz, University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire
Steven L. Brewer, Pennsylvania State University, Shenango
Measuring the Impact of Parenting Practices on the Development of Self-Control in Children: A Meta-Analysis
Glen Ishoy, University of West Georgia
SESSION 325: ADOLESCENT AND DATING VIOLENCE
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Carrie Mulford, National Institute of Justice
Extending Johnson's Intimate Partner Violence Typology: Lessons from an Adolescent Sample
Adam Messinger, Northeastern Illinois University
Deborah Fry, Child Protection Research Centre, University of Edinburgh
Vaughn I. Rickert, Indiana University
Marina Catallozzi, Columbia University
Leslie Davidson, Columbia University
174
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Stay/Leave Decision-Making in Violent Dating Relationships
Jennifer Copp, Bowling Green State University
Peggy Giordano, Bowling Green State University
Wendy Manning, Bowling Green State University
Monica Longmore, Bowling Green State University
Risky Behaviors and Dating Violence among Young Adults
Christina Policastro, Georgia State University
Leah Daigle, Georgia State University
Understanding Abuse in Teen Dating Relationships through Concept Mapping
Carrie Mulford, National Institute of Justice
Alyssa Goldman, Concept Systems, Inc.
Scott Rosas, Concept Systems, Inc.
SESSION 326: SEX OFFENDERS AND SOCIETY I
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Samuel Chibuike Arungwa, Prairie View A&M University
"No Known Cure" Debate: A Philosophy of Sex Offender Management
Liying Li, Metropolitan State College of Denver
A Multi-State Recidivism Study Using Risk Scores and Tier Guidelines from the Adam Walsh Act
Kristen M. Zgoba, New Jersey Department of Corrections
Jill Levenson, Lynn University
Consequences for Adam Walsh Act Compliance
Roger Kernsmith, Eastern Michigan University
Poco Kernsmith, Wayne State University
James A. Wilson, Russell Sage Foundation
Searching for the Link: Measuring Awareness and Protective Behaviors Resulting from Sex Offender Community Notification Policies
Nayab Hakim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 327: THE EXPERIENCE OF HATE CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jacob Kang-Brown, University of California, Irvine
Exploring Victim Accounts of Bias-Related Assaults: Findings on Race and Ethnicity from the National Union of Students Hate Crime
Survey 2011
Lucy Michael, University of Hull
Masculinity, Marginalization and Violence: A Case Study of the English Defense League
Jon Garland, University of Leicester
Teaching an Abnormal World View: Hate Studies
Gregg W. Etter, University of Central Missouri
Jeffery M. Johnson, University of Mississippi
SESSION 328: POLICE CULTURE, GOVERNANCE, AND CANADA
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Samuel Tanner, Universite de Montreal
(Re)Negotiating Police Culture through Partnership Working: Trust, Compromise and the ‘New’ Pragmatism
Daniel McCarthy, University of Surrey, UK
Megan O'Neill, University of Salford
175
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Examining Police Culture: Institutional Cultures in Two Canadian Cities
Holly Campeau, University of Toronto
Development in Police Governance in Canada
Tammy Landau, Ryerson University
Negotiating Police Work in Post-Conflict Environments: The Experience of Canadian Police Officers
Samuel Tanner, Universite de Montreal
Chanele Boulet-Gauthier, Universite de Montreal
SESSION 329: ROUNDTABLE: SOCIAL NETWORKING, FLASH MOBS, AND ITS IMPACT ON
LAW ENFORCEMENT
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Patricia M. Griffin, Saint Joseph's University
Discussants:
Charles J. Kocher, Cumberland County College
Darren K. Stocker, Cumberland County College
SESSION 330: ROUNDTABLE: PROVIDING EXPERT COMMENTARY TO THE MEDIA: THE DO’S
AND DON’TS
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Tod Burke, Radford University
Discussants:
Hank Fradella, California State University, Long Beach
Stephen Owen, Radford University
Casey Jordan, Western Connecticut State University
SESSION 331: ROUNDTABLE: STRATEGIES FOR REACHING UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS IN
THE CLASSROOM: A ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Amanda Cox, Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
Shelly Clevenger, Illinois State University
Rebekah Patterson, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Lisa Carter, Florida Southern University
Renee Dorothy Lamphere, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Cody Inman, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 332: SCHOOL AND EXTRA-CURRICULAR INEQUALITIES, DELINQUENCY, AND
DISCIPLINE
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Cindy Brooks Dollar, North Carolina State University
Religion for the Poor and Performing Arts for the Wealthier: Poverty and Delinquency
Cassady Pitt, Bowling Green State University
Breaking Racial and Ethnic Stereotypes and School Discipline
Zahra Shekarkhar, University of Florida
Anthony A. Peguero, Virginia Tech
Ann Marie Popp, Duquesne University
Dixie J. Koo, California State University, Fullerton
T. Lorraine Latimore, East Central University
176
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
School Discipline and Delinquency: Suspension, Arrest, and Incarceration in the NLSY97
Tracey L. Shollenberger, Harvard University
School-Related Protective Factors and Contextual Variations in Stockholm, Sweden
Julia Sandahl, Stockholm University
SESSION 333: APPROACHES TO DRUG CONTROL
Thursday, November 15 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Albert M. Kopak, Western Carolina University
Assessing Harm Reduction: The Impact of Therapeutic Jurisprudence on Non-Completing Drug Court Clients
K. Michael Reynolds, University of Central Florida
Traci R. Francis, University of Central Florida
Legal Coercion as Motivation for Drug Court Participation
Maria C. Janoski, Williams Cuker Berezofsky, LLC
Paul A. Magro, Ball State University
Residential Substance Abuse Treatment Contamination: Differential Association and Related Factors
Albert M. Kopak, Western Carolina University
Lydia Dawn Scott, Western Carolina University
Dottie Saxon Greene, Western Carolina University
SESSION 334: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: THE GROWING CHORUS - WE ENDED
STUDENT APATHY WITH TEAM-BASED LEARNING PART I
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Key Components of Team-Based Learning
William Roberson, University at Albany, SUNY
Experiencing Team-Based Learning
Janet P. Stamatel, University of Kentucky
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Experiencing Team-Based Learning, Part 2
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Janet P. Stamatel, University of Kentucky
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 335: THE ETHNOGRAPHY OF PUNISHMENT: EXPLORING RESIDUAL AND
EMERGENT ELEMENTS OF CONTEMPORARY PENAL INTERVENTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Seeing Like a Jail: Epistemologies of Carceral Expansion
Judah Nathan Schept, Eastern Kentucky University
Experiencing a Coerced Identity: The Process of Defining a Sex Offender Parolee and How They Respond
Emily I. Troshynski, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
The Not-So-Strange Bedfellows of Rehabilitation and Punitive Ideologies: The Roles of Responsibility, Cynicism and Expectations of
Danger in Integrating the Diverse Goals of Parole
Robert J. Werth, Qunnipiac University
Discussant:
Elliott Currie, University of California, Irvine
177
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 336: CONVICT CRIMINOLOGY: PRISONERS STORIES
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Justin Piche, University of Ottawa
My First "Free" Prisoners' Justice Day
Petey Petey, Journal of Prisoners on Prison
I May Have a Life
Joe Lekarowicz, Journal of Prisoners on Prison
Cauldron of Solitude
Eugene Dey, Journal of Prisoners on Prison
The Third Turkey: Tenure, Fear, and Loathing
Glen David Curry, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Discussants:
Rebecca Sue Katz, Morehead State University
Jeffrey Ian Ross, University of Baltimore
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 337: BLIND SPOTS IN RESEARCH ON GENERAL STRAIN THEORY
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Juyoung Song, University of West Georgia
Does Crime Help Reduce Negative Emotions? A Latent-Variable Modeling Test of Crime’s Coping Efficacy
Sung Joon Jang, Baylor University
Jeremy R. Rhodes, Hardin Simmons University
School Bullying: An Empirical Test of General Strain Theory
Byongook Moon, University of Texas at San Antonio
Sung Joon Jang, Baylor University
Stressors, Workplace Climate, and Police Stress in South Korea
Larry T. Hoover, Sam Houston State University
Hee Sub Shim, Sam Houston State University
Youngoh Jo, Sam Houston State University
Discussant:
Robert Agnew, Emory University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 338: STRUCTURAL DETERMINANTS OF CRIME RATES: THE ROLE OF
INSTITUTIONAL ENGAGEMENT IN SOLVING THE AGE STRUCTURE-CRIME RATE PUZZLE
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kenneth C. Land, Duke University
Statement of the Age Structure-Crime Rate Puzzle
Kenneth C. Land, Duke University
178
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Differential Degrees of Institutional Engagement and the Direction of the Age Structure-Homicide Relationship
Patricia L. McCall, North Carolina State University
Kenneth C. Land, Duke University
Cindy Brooks Dollar, North Carolina State University
Karen F. Parker, University of Delaware
Discussants:
Steven Messner, University at Albany, SUNY
Maria Tcherni, University of New Haven
Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri - St. Louis
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 339: HIGH-RISK OFFENDERS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
Specialization among High-Risk Offenders: Closing the Gap Between Practice and Research
Tamara Nerlien, University of Calgary
Conditioning Compliance: The Case of High-Risk Offenders
Kevin McQuillan, University of Calgary
Tamara Nerlien, University of Calgary
Erin Elan Gibbs Van Brunschot, University of Calgary
A Microspatial Analysis of Sex Offenses: Risk Terrain Modeling in Alberta, Canada
Erin Elan Gibbs Van Brunschot, University of Calgary
Yasemin Gaziarifoglu, Rutgers University
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
Public Notification of High-Risk Offenders: News and Social Media in Alberta
Heather Rollwagen, Ryerson University
Discussant:
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
WORKSHOP
SESSION 340: NEW FACULTY WORKSHOP
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Lisa Murphy, La Sierra University
Discussants:
Brenda Sims Blackwell, Georgia State University
Venessa Garcia, Kean University
Kimberly Cook, University of North Carolina Wilmington
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 341: UNITED NATIONS PANEL I: ECOLOGICAL CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
179
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Illegal Wildlife Trade in Norway: Practices and Law Enforcement
Ragnhild Aslaug Sollund, University of Oslo
Using GIS to Examine Situational Predictors of Illegal Fishing Activities Carried Out Globally
Gohar A. Petrossian, William Paterson University
War Crimes and Environmental Crime
Aaron Fichtelberg, University of Delaware
Discussant:
Mary Clifford, St. Cloud State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 342: CRIMINAL JUSTICE DRUG ABUSE TREATMENT STUDIES (CJDATS):
IMPROVING ASSESSMENT AND CASE PLANNING IN CORRECTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michael Prendergast, University of California, Los Angeles - ISAP
Overview of CJDATS and the Organizational Process Improvement Intervention (OPII) Study
Tisha Wiley, National Institute on Drug Abuse
Bennett Fletcher, National Institute on Drug Abuse
Assessment in Correctional Institutions and Community Reentry: Correspondence to Best Practices
Matthew Hiller, Temple University
Cynthia Robbins, University of Delaware
Wayne Welsh, Temple University
Gary Zajac, Pennsylvania State University
Gerald Stahler, Temple University
Offender Assessment, Case Planning, and Referral to Community-Based Treatment: Effects of a Structured Process Improvement
Initiative
Wayne Welsh, Temple University
Roger Peters, University of South Florida
Laura Monico, University of Delaware
Lyn Stein, University of Rhode Island
Gerald Stahler, Temple University
Influence of Organizational and Staff Characteristics on Success in Implementing Process Improvement Goals in Correctional
Treatment Settings
Michael Prendergast, University of California, Los Angeles - ISAP
Wayne Welsh, Temple University
Gerald Melnick, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.
Lyn Stein, University of Rhode Island
Jamieson Duvall, University of Kentucky
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 343: BIOSOCIAL INFLUENCES ON THE DEVELOPMENT AND CONSEQUENCES OF
SELF-CONTROL
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Genetic and Environmental Factors Associated with the Stability of Self-Control Early in Life
John Paul Wright, University of Cincinnati
Michelle Anne Coyne, University of Cincinnati
180
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Malleability of Self-Control: A Biosocial Investigation of Genetic, Peer, and Parenting Influences
Elise Costa, University of Florida
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Ronald Simons, University of Georgia
Analyzing the Origins of Life-Course-Persistent Offending: The Role of Self-Control as an Endophenotype
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
The Origins of Self-Control and Antisocial Behavior: The Role of Intelligence and Heritability
Yi-Fen Lu, Sam Houston State University
Brian B. Boutwell, Sam Houston State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
Discussant:
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 344: CRIME AND PLACE: FEAR AND DISORDER
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brian Lawton, George Mason University
Collective Efficacy, Social Capital and Social Disorganization and the Spatial Distribution of Fear of Crime and Disorder: An
Empirical Test
Gerben J.N. Bruinsma, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Lieven Pauwels, Ghent University
Wim Bernasco, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Frank Weerman, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Proximity to Crime: An Examination of Citizens' Reported Fear
Brian Lawton, George Mason University
Location-Time Study of Children’s Perceptions of Safety from Violence during Travel to School
Douglas Wiebe, University of Pennsylvania
Profiling Disorderly Places: An Examination of Disorder and Its Impact in Residential Neighborhoods
Tamara D. Madensen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
William Sousa, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 345: IMMIGRATION AND THE CHANGING SOCIAL FABRIC OF AMERICAN CITIES
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephanie Di Pietro, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Crime and Enforcement in Immigrant Neighborhoods: Evidence from New York City
Garth Davies, Simon Fraser University
Jeff Fagan, Columbia University
Are Immigrant Youth Less Violent? Specifying the Reasons and Mechanisms
John M. MacDonald, University of Pennsylvania
Jessica Saunders, RAND Corporation
The Paradox of Law Enforcement in Immigrant Communities:
David S. Kirk, University of Texas
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
181
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Why Some Immigrant Neighborhoods Are Safer than Others?
Charis Kubrin, University of California, Irvine
Discussant:
Ramiro Martinez, Northeastern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 346: CRIMESOLUTIONS.GOV: IMPROVEMENTS TO CONTENT AND UTILITY
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Phelan Wyrick, Office of Justice Programs
CrimeSolutions.gov: Program Review Methods, Functions, and Usage
Phelan Wyrick, Office of Justice Programs
Assessing and Displaying Meta-Analysis Results on CrimeSolutions.gov
Mark W. Lipsey, Vanderbilt University
Marcia Cohen, Development Services Group, Inc.
Using CrimeSolutions.gov in the Classroom
Alissa Pollitz Worden, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 347: REPORT OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMIES ON JUVENILE JUSTICE REFORM
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Betty Chemers, The National Academies
Discussants:
Robert L. Johnson, UMDNJ - New Jersey Medical School
Edward P. Mulvey, University of Pittsburgh
Jeff Butts, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
MEETING
SESSION 348: STUDENT AFFAIRS COMMITTEE MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 349: THEFT OF A NATION AND WHO ARE THE CRIMINALS?
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Chair:
David O. Friedrichs, University of Scranton
Presenters
John Hagan, Northwestern University
Gregg Barak, Eastern Michigan University
Critics
William S. Laufer, University of Pennsylvania
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Henry N. Pontell, University of California, Irvine
Sally Simpson, University of Maryland
182
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 350: MENTAL DISORDER AND VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Melissa Thompson, Portland State University
An Examination of the Effects of Violent Crime Exposure on Police Suicide, Alcohol Consumption, and Divorce
Stephen A. Bishopp, University of Texas at Dallas
Correlates of Clergy Sexual Abuse: Implications for the Prevention of Sexual Abuse in Institutional Settings
Cynthia Calkins Mercado, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Karen Terry, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Christina Massey, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Cruelty to Animals and Antisocial Personality Disorder: Criminological and Forensic Correlations
Nuria Querol, GEVHA / Autonomous University of Barcelona
Angel Cuquerella, Institut de Medicina Legal de Catalunya, Barcelona, Spain.
Frank Ascione, Denver University
Sebastian Rubira, Policia de la Generalitat- Mossos d'Esquadra
Angelo Puccia, Advanced High School of Criminological Sciences
Phil Arkow, Latham Foundation's International Child and Animal Abuse Prevention Project
Allie Philips, National Center for Prosecution of Animal Abuse / National District Attorneys Association
Marc Pintor, University of Barcelona
The Relationship between Dating Violence and Suicidal Behavior in a National Sample of Adolescents
Scott Belshaw, University of North Texas
Julie Ahmad Siddique, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Jennifer Tanner, University of Cincinnati
G. Solomon Osho, Prairie View A&M University
SESSION 351: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN POLICE INVESTIGATION PRACTICES
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michael J. Jenkins, University of New Haven
Myths, Perceptions and Realities in the Practice of Criminal Investigative Analysis
Amber Scherer, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
John Jarvis, Federal Bureau of Investigation
C. Gabrielle Salfati, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Investigation and Prosecution of Stalking Cases in Cleveland, Ohio
Wendy Regoeczi, Cleveland State University
Tracy Grimes, Cleveland State University
Determinants of Homicide Solvability in Urban Canada: An Exploratory Analysis of Detectives’ Perspectives
Tanya Trussler, Mount Royal University
Christina Witt, Calgary Police Services
Comparing the Relative Solvability of Property Crimes Using Local and National DNA Databases
Michael J. Jenkins, University of New Haven
John DeCarlo, University of New Haven
SESSION 352: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES AND POLICY CHANGES IN THE COURT SYSTEM
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nichole Tucker, Seattle University
183
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Counting Cases: Definitional and Measurement Issues for Court-Related Research
Andrew Reid, Simon Fraser University
Shihong Mu, Simon Fraser University
Paul Brantingham, Simon Fraser University
Graham Farrell, Simon Fraser University
Substance-Induced Psychosis and Criminal Responsibility
Michelle S. Lawrence, Simon Fraser University
The Extensive Reach of Outstanding Warrants in New Jersey
Shenique Thomas, Rutgers University
Michael Ostermann, Rutgers University
The Uncertainty of “Mandatory” Economic Sanctions: Inconsistency across Offenders, Crimes, and Counties
Sarah Elizabeth Bowles, Pennsylvania State University
Valerie Clark, Minnesota Department of Corrections
R. Barry Ruback, Pennsylvania State University
SESSION 353: THE RESPONSE OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM TO SEXUAL ASSAULT
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christine Bond, Queensland University of Technology
An Analysis of How Rape is Prosecuted
Darnesha L. Miller, University of Illinois at Chicago
Prosecutorial Discretion and Decision Making in the Charging of Sexual Assault Cases
Megan Kennedy, University at Albany, SUNY
Prosecutors' Charging Decisions in Sexual Assault Cases: Important Lessons from Los Angeles
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
Katharine Tellis, California State University, Los Angeles
Rape Law Reform: An Update from First Contact to Final Conclusion
Elizabeth Keller-Charbonneau, University of Nebraska at Omaha
SESSION 354: KEYS TO SUCCESS IN COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Roger Guy, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
What Professionals Say is Important to the Success of Working with Offenders
Andy Bain, University of Portsmouth, UK
Examining the Relationship between Staff Characteristics and Recidivism in Correctional Programming
Jessica J. Warner, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Vigo County, Indiana Community Corrections Work Release: A Four-Year Study
William Mackey, University of Cincinnati
What We Do Matters: The Travis County Adult Probation Fidelity and Outcome Study
Carsten Andresen, Travis County Adult Probation
SESSION 355: MOVING TOWARD A GREATER UNDERSTANDING OF GANGS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Daniel Walter Scott, University of California, Irvine
184
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Attitude is Everything: Youth Attitudes and Prison Gangs through the Lens of Social Identity Theory
Daniel Walter Scott, University of California, Irvine
Crackin’ Ears and Kickin’ Off: Gangs, Masculinity and Violence in Youth Correctional Facilities
Jessica Grebenkemper, University of California, Irvine
Using Structural Gang Typology to Guide Gang Control Efforts: A Researcher-Law Enforcement Collaboration
Moises Prospero, IE Consulting, LLC
Jason Castillo, University of Utah
Lizbeth Velazquez, University of Utah
Beyond Gang Motives: Violence as a Function of Gang Organization in Youth Correctional Facilities
Cheryl Maxson, University of California, Irvine
Daniel Walter Scott, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 356: EXAMINING INFLUENCES ON CORRECTIONAL POPULATIONS AND
RESOURCES
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
Economic Conditions and Punishment: A Meta-Analysis
Dae-Young Kim, Buffalo State College
Jawjeong Wu, Buffalo State College
Understanding Post-Recessionary State-Level Correctional Policy Adjustments: Potential for Penal Parsimony?
Pavel V. Vasiliev, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Shannon M. Monnat, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Andrew L. Spivak, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Do Drug Courts Conserve Custodial Resources? A Meta-Analysis
Brian Fuleihan, University of South Carolina
Frank V. Ferdik, University of South Carolina
Eric L. Sevigny, University of South Carolina
Measuring the Impact of Public Safety Realignment in California
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
Helen Braithwaite, University of California, Irvine
Sharon Farrell, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 357: CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND STATE RESPONSES TO VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Randa Jean Embry, University of Central Missouri
State Compensation for Intentional Violent Crime: What Do Victims Expect?
Maarten Kunst, Leiden University
Nathalie-Sharon Koster
The Role of Restorative Justice in Addressing State Crime: Eugenics and Reparations in North Carolina
Sarah Brightman, Fayetteville State University
Emily Lenning, Fayetteville State University
Impact of Crime on Victims Class (ICVC) Implementation in Missouri Correctional Facilities
Randa Jean Embry, University of Central Missouri
Scott Chenault, University of Central Missouri
Jennifer Carson, University of Central Missouri
185
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 358: INMATE MISCONDUCT AND RESPONSES TO MISCONDUCT IN JAILS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Francis Gerard Olive, III, University of New Haven
An Analysis of the Factors Associated with Jail Misconduct: An Application of Correctional Theory
Michelle Cubellis, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Bryce Elling Peterson, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Are Therapeutic Community Residents’ Economic Choice Behaviors Correlated with Their Program Behaviors?
Jessica Linley, Ohio State University
Anup Gampa, Ohio State University
Keith Warren, Ohio State University
Brian Roe, Ohio State University
Ashleigh Hodge, Ohio State University
Using Administrative Data to Prioritize Reentry Services: Validating a Jail-Based Risk Screening Tool
Qing Wei, Vera Institute of Justice
Jim Parsons, Vera Institute of Justice
The Effect of Segregation Policy Reforms at the Hampden County Massachusetts Sheriff's Department
Francis Gerard Olive, III, University of New Haven
SESSION 359: GENDER AND THE DESISTANCE PROCESS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mercer Sullivan, Rutgers University
Masculinities, Persistence, and Desistance from Crime: Findings from a Swedish Study of Life-Courses and Crime
Christoffer Carlsson, Stockholm University
Life Stories of Desisting Ex-Offenders
Maya Silva, Temple University
Post-Peak Age Analysis of Crime by Gender from a Life Course Perspective
Siyu Liu, University at Albany, SUNY
Fatlherhood, Crime, and Masculinities: Moving Beyond the "Turning Point" Question
Mercer Sullivan, Rutgers University
SESSION 360: INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL NEIGHBORHOOD FACTORS AFFECTING CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Barbara D. Warner, Georgia State University
Adolescent Context and Trajectories of Delinquency: A Neighborhood-Centered Approach
Tara D. Warner, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Social Organization, Sources of Community Investment, and the Prevention of Street Crime
David M. Ramey, Ohio State University
Emily A. Shrider, Ohio State University
The Role of Green Space and the Criminogenic Nature of Surrounding Neighborhoods
Karyn Sporer, University of Nebraska at Omaha
John Crank, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Main and Moderating Effects of Formal Controls on Crime in U.S. Cities
Allison Carter, University of South Carolina
Benjamin Steiner, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Emily Wright, University of Nebraska at Omaha
186
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 361: PRISONER REENTRY FOR MINORITY OFFENDERS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kecia R. Johnson, University at Albany, SUNY
Consequences of Incarceration and Reentry for Young Adult Mexican American Men with a History of Gang Membership
Avelardo Valdez, University of Southern California
Alice Cepeda, University of Southern California
Is Success Possible? Uncovering Barriers to Reentry for African American Men
Deshonna Collier-Goubil, Biola University
Charles Adams, Bowie State University
Vernon Brownlee, Bowie State University
Samuel Ojo, Bowie State University
Oluwatobi Owolabi, Bowie State University
African American Men's and Women's Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence During Reentry
Matasha Harris, Florida Memorial University
Moving Beyond Black and White: Examining the Incarceration-Earnings Relationship among Latinos
Kecia R. Johnson, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 362: MAKING IT WORK: CORRECTING THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM AND
ADJUSTING THE PROGRAM
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Elizabeth Capps, Metropolitan State College of Denver
A Case Study of the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act Investigation in Arizona
Melanie Taylor, Arizona State University
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
Charles M. Katz, Arizona State University
Doing the Right Thing: The Imagination of Desistance
Michaela Soyer, University of Chicago
Parental, Social, and Political Child Neglect
Harry Adams, Prairie View A&M University
Sight and Sound Separation for 18-20-Year-Olds Serving Juvenile Commitments
Jennifer Elizabeth Capps, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Jennifer Lasswell, Metropolitan State College of Denver
SESSION 363: INFLUENCES ON ATTITUDES TOWARD POLICE
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mengyan Dai, Old Dominion University
Perceived Image, Role Orientations and Job Satisfaction: An Examination of Police Officers in a Metropolitan Police Department on the
West Coast
Mary Donaghy, Arkansas State University
Doris Chu, Arkansas State University
Public Satisfaction with the Police: Landline Phone vs. Cell Phone-Only Users in a Random Telephone Survey
Ling Ren, Sam Houston State University
Jihong Solomon Zhao, Sam Houston State University
Dennis Longmire, Sam Houston State University
Race-Ethnicity, Social Class, and Unfair Stops by Police
Eileen E. Spitznas Bjornstrom, University of Missouri
187
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Correlations between Police Job Satisfaction and Police Misbehavior in South Korea: Multivariate Analyses
Jeonglim Kim, Sam Houston State University
Ryung Nam Kim, University of Chicago
Racial Differences in Response to Police Disrespect
Mengyan Dai, Old Dominion University
SESSION 364: POLICING ISSUES IN THE MODERN WORLD
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Dilip K. Das, International Police Executive Symposium
Assessing the Influence of International Cooperation on National Police Culture
Sappho Xenakis, Centre de Recheches Sociologiques sur le Droit et les Institutions Pénales (CESDIP), France
Public Reaction to the 2011 Russian Police Reforms
Nicolai N. Demidov, The Volgograd Academy of the Russian Internal Affairs Ministry
K. Michael Reynolds, University of Central Florida
Olga Semukhina, Marquette University
Putting Neighborhood Contexts into the Mix: A Multilevel Analysis of Job Satisfaction among South Korean Police Officers
Dae-Hoon Kwak, Illinois State University
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
Economic Development, Armed Violence, and Public Safety
Dilip K. Das, International Police Executive Symposium
Garth Den Heyer, New Zealand Police, Wellington / International Police Executive Symposium
SESSION 365: GENDER AND CRIMINAL BEHAVIOR
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kerri Jones, North Carolina Central University
Gender Differences and TWD: An SLT Approach
Deborah T. Vegh, Edinboro University of Pennsylvania
Melissa Ricketts, Shippensburg University
George Higgins, University of Louisville
Catherine Marcum, Appalachian State University
Social Bonds and Non-Medical Prescription Drug Use: A Gendered Analysis
Megan Gosse, University of Delaware
China: Gender, Age, and Crime in the Life Span
Moulin Xiong, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
The Prevalence of Female Crimes
Kerri Jones, North Carolina Central University
Desiree Akuchie, North Carolina Central University
Lorna Elaine Grant, North Carolina Central University
SESSION 366: LARGE SCALE FRAUDS AND ABUSES OF POWER
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Susan Will, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Pension Fraud: Vulnerabilities, Opportunities and Regulatory Oversight
Jacqueline Drew, Griffith University
Michael Drew, Griffith University
188
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Routine Activity Theory and its Applicability to White Collar Crime
Cynthia Koller, Shippensburg University
Surreal Estate: Rendering Abuses of Power Invisible in Hong Kong's Real Estate Industry
Yujing Fun, University of Hong Kong
Knight's Fall
Susan Will, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 367: CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
David Kauzlarich, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Riot, Risk and 'Thrill Seeking Youth': Rioting as Transgressive Edgework
Laura Katharina Naegler, University of Hamburg
Treadmill of Crime: How a Political Economy of Environmental Disorganization Can Contribute to the Greening of Crime
Paul Stretesky, University of Colorado - Denver
Michael Long, Oklahoma State University
Michael Lynch, University of South Florida
Quantum Postmodern Criminology: An Alternative Ontology
Dragan Milovanovic, Northeastern Illinois University
A Qualitative Interview Study on Punk Rock Resistance to State and Corporate Crime
David Kauzlarich, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
SESSION 368: SEX OFFENDERS AND SOCIETY II
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Derek Cohen, University of Cincinnati
Sex Offender Laws, Past and Present: A Review and Analysis of Legislation
Jennifer N. Grimes, Indiana State University
Sex Offender Policy Diffusion in the Midwest
Robert Lytle, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Lisa Sample, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Social Control Theory and Sex Offender Policy: Are We Breaking the Bonds Needed for Success?
Ashley R. Kilmer, University of Delaware
The Philosophical and Theoretical Foundations of the Three Major Sex Offender Policies
Joseph A. Ferrandino, Indiana University Northwest
Civil Commitment of Sex Offenders: Does the Fear and Risk Justify the Cost?
Georgette Bradstreet, West Virginia University
SESSION 369: QUALITATIVE AND QUANTITATIVE APPROACHES TO MOTOR VEHICLE
THEFT
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matt R. Nobles, Sam Houston State University
Activating Motivation in Auto-Theft
Robert Domiano, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Near-Repeat Patterns of Professional and Amateur Vehicle Theft in Newark, New Jersey
Steven Block, Central Connecticut State University
189
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Spatial Analysis of Social-Structural Correlates of Auto Theft in Houston, TX
Bora Lee, Sam Houston State University
Joongyeup Lee, Sam Houston State University
Matt R. Nobles, Sam Houston State University
Yan Zhang, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 370: ROUTINES, SITUATIONS, AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Vincenzo Antonio Sainato, Loyola University New Orleans
Identification of Factors Influencing the Commission of Burglaries
Mustafa Donmez, Turkish National Police
Juveniles' Routines and their Victimization in South Korea
Yongsok Kim, Texas State University - San Marcos
Situational Circumstances of Juvenile Crime: Where, When, With Whom and How?
Simone Walser, University of Zurich
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
Drug Transportation Routes and Robbery: A Brand New Meaning to "Highway Robbery"
Lin Huff-Corzine, University of Central Florida
Greg S. Weaver, Auburn University
James C. McCutcheon, University of Central Florida
Jay Corzine, University of Central Florida
SESSION 371: EVALUATING PRISONER REENTRY PROGRAMS III
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lindsey Cramer, The Urban Institute
Offender Reentry, Day Reporting Centers, and the Disconnection between Evidence-Based Practices and Policy
Kyle C. Ward, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Offender Reentry: An Assessment of Opportunity and Participation in Programming
Dara Drawbridge, Northeastern University
Rebecca Rodriguez-Meade, Northeastern University
Natasha A. Frost, Northeastern University
Circles of Support and Accountability (CoSA): Reducing Sex Offender Recidivism in Canada
Ken Montgomery, University of Regina
Rick Ruddell, University of Regina
Nicholas Jones, University of Regina
Reentering Fathers: Initial Findings from Responsible Fatherhood Initiatives
Lindsey Cramer, The Urban Institute
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
Jocelyn Fontaine, The Urban Institute
SESSION 372: POLICE EDUCATION
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Robert F. Vodde, Fairleigh Dickinson University
College Cops: A Study of Police Education in California
Christie Gardiner, California State University, Fullerton
Sabrina Schneider, California State University, Fullerton
190
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Bad Cop, No Diploma: The Impact of Post-Secondary Educational Requirements for Law Enforcement Officers
Kevin Walsh, Aurora University
The Relationship between Level of Education and Moral Judgment Competence of Police Officers and its Impact on Misconduct
Meri Avetisyan, Armenian State Pedagogical University
Robin Bryant, Canterbury Christ Church University, UK
The Influence of Social Learning Theory on Police Training and Education
Robert F. Vodde, Fairleigh Dickinson University
SESSION 373: ROUNDTABLE: NEWS COVERAGE OF CRIME AND JUSTICE IN 2012
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Ted Gest, Criminal Justice Journalists
Angela Caputo, Chicago Reporter
Frank Main, Chicago Sun-Times
Gina Barton, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Mick Dumke, Chicago Reader
SESSION 374: ROUNDTABLE: ORGANIZED CRIME IN THE DIGITAL AGE
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Michael Mcguire, University of Surrey
Peter Grabosky, Australian National University
David S. Wall, Durham University
SESSION 375: ROUNDTABLE: THE FUTURE OF CRIMINOLOGY: A TRIBUTE TO DAVID
FARRINGTON
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chairs:
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
Brandon C. Welsh, Northeastern University
Discussants:
Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie Mellon University
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Doris Layton MacKenzie, Pennsylvania State University
Richard E. Tremblay, University of Montreal
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
SESSION 376: ROUNDTABLE: PH.D. MAMA: BALANCING MOTHERHOOD AND THE ACADEMY
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Denise Paquette Boots, University of Texas at Dallas
Jill Rosenbaum, California State University, Fullerton
Stacy Mallicoat, California State University, Fullerton
Amanda Burgess-Proctor, Oakland University
Christina DeJong, Michigan State University
SESSION 377: ROUNDTABLE: POLICING AND PUBLIC SAFETY
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Airport Madness: An Examination of Attitudinal Support for Airport Racial Profiling
Aaron Puhrmann, University of Miami
Critically Analyzing Community Policing In Contemporary Contexts
Debra Amy Langan, Wilfrid Laurier University
191
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Meacham Park: How Do Blacks Experience Policing in the Suburbs?
Andrea Shonetelle Boyles, Lindenwood University
SESSION 378: CORRECTIONAL PROGRAMMING FOR WOMEN
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Courtney A. Crittenden, University of South Carolina
Beyond Violence: Piloting an Intervention for Women Convicted of Violent Crimes
Sheryl Kubiak, Michigan State University
Gina Fedock, Michigan State University
Woo Jong Kim, Michigan State University
Deborah Bybee, Michigan State University
Women Inmates’ Assessment of Health Care Services in Prisons in Kansas and Ohio
Janice Proctor, Ohio University - Eastern Campus
Working with Women Prisoners
Stephanie Hayman, University of Alberta
Assessing Gender Differences in the Availability of Programming in U.S. Prisons
Courtney A. Crittenden, University of South Carolina
Barbara A. Koons-Witt, University of South Carolina
SESSION 379: RESEARCH ON METHAMPHETAMINE USE AND CONTROL
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Kristin Carbone-Lopez, University of Missouri - St. Louis
A Preliminary Analysis of the Impact of Methamphetamine Use on States' Substance Abuse Treatment
Catherine Collins, University of Florida
Exiting the Life: Understanding Desistance from Methamphetamine
Rashi K. Shukla, University of Central Oklahoma
E. Elaine Bartgis, University of Central Oklahoma
Amanda Gautier, University of Central Oklahoma
Kathryn Letourneau, University of Central Oklahoma
Shannon Jackson, University of Central Oklahoma
Emelia Siobhan Chrisco, University of Central Oklahoma
Women's Involvement in the Street Level Methamphetamine Market
Julie Yingling, Michigan State University
Above the Law? Changes in Methamphetamine Laws and Users’ Perceptions of Their Effectiveness
Kristin Carbone-Lopez, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 380: RESEARCH ON CRIMINAL CAREERS
Thursday, November 15 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michael Rocque, Northeastern University
Fatality or Skills? The Role of Criminal Competence in Avoiding Arrest
Frederic Ouellet, University of Montreal
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
The Role of Conventional and Criminal Social Capital in Late Onset Drug Trafficking Careers
Wei Wang, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
192
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
In It for the Green: Career Transitions of Domestic Cannabis Growers
Aili Malm, California State University, Long Beach
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Holly Nguyen, University of Maryland
The Lost Concept: Re-Introducing Maturation as a Cause of Desistance
Michael Rocque, Northeastern University
Chad Posick, Northeastern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 381: MEASURING POLICE LEGITIMACY AND FAIRNESS: THE POLICE-CIVILIAN
INTERACTION (PCI) SURVEY
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Dennis P. Rosenbaum, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Current Status of the Police-Civilian Interaction (PCI) Survey
Dennis P. Rosenbaum, University of Illinois at Chicago
Daniel S. Lawrence, University of Illinois at Chicago
Susan M. Hartnett, University of Illinois at Chicago
Introducing the Police-Civilian Interaction (PCI) Survey in Boston
Jack McDevitt, Northeastern University
Chad Posick, Northeastern University
Translating Research into Practice: Implications of the Police-Civilian Interaction (PCI) Survey for Training in Chicago
Brian S. Murphy, Chicago Police Department
Bruce D. Lipman, Chicago Police Education and Training Academy
Discussant:
Garry McCarthy, Chicago Police Department
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 382: MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE: COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES ON WRONGFUL
CONVICTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Marvin Zalman, Wayne State University
Wrongful Convictions in China: A Preliminary Exploration
Marvin Zalman, Wayne State University
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
Truth be Told: Direct and Indirect Influences of Appellate Review on the Truthfulness of Trial Verdicts
Ralph Grunewald, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Tunnel Vision and Bias Confirmation as Causes of Wrongful Conviction: How Vulnerable are Different Systems of Criminal Justice?
Chrisje Brants, Willem Pompe Institute
Wrongful Conviction: Considering Prosecutors’ Ability to Effect Change
Randall Grometstein, Fitchburg State University
193
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 383: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: THE GROWING CHORUS - WE ENDED
STUDENT APATHY WITH TEAM-BASED LEARNING PART II
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Janet P. Stamatel, University of Kentucky
Experiences with TBL, 1
Kristen Budd, Indiana University South Bend
Experiences with TBL, 2
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Megan C. Kurlychek, University at Albany, SUNY
Experiences with TBL, 3
Rachel E. Stein, West Virginia University
Corey Colyer, West Virginia University
Discussant:
William Roberson, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 384: WHY HAS MASSIVE INCARCERATION NOT MADE ILLEGAL DRUGS MORE
EXPENSIVE?
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Eric L. Sevigny, University of South Carolina
A Theoretical Contribution as to Why Mass Incarceration Might Not Raise Drug Prices
Peter Reuter, University of Maryland
The Effects of the Aging of Drug Sellers
Harold Pollack, University of Chicago
The Limited Contribution Currently Made by Drug Courts
Eric L. Sevigny, University of South Carolina
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 385: INNOVATIVE APPROACHES TO ENSURING EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES IN
CORRECTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
Evaluating A System-Wide Expansion of the Reach of Community Corrections
Erin Harbinson, University of Cincinnati
Brian Lovins, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
Evaluation of the Quality and Effectiveness of Prison Education and Treatment Programming
Angela Estes, University of Cincinnati
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
194
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Delivering Effective Practices: A Compare and Contrast of Community and Institutional Settings
Brian Lovins, University of Cincinnati
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Discussant:
Shelley Listwan, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 386: CULTURAL APPROACHES TO GREEN CRIMINOLOGY: NEW AND EMERGING
PERSPECTIVES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University
Green Cultural Criminology and Apocalyptic Environmental Harm
Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University
You Never Miss the Water Till the Well Runs Dry: Water, Waste, and Crimes of Consumption
Nigel South, University of Essex
Little Red Riding Hood, Pedophiles and Crime Films, Oh My! Toward a Popular Green Criminology
Steven Kohm, University of Winnipeg
Pauline Greenhill, University of Winnipeg
What Do We Do Now? Cross-National Differences in Normative Solutions to the BP Oil Spill
Kimberly Zagorski, University of Wisconsin - Stout
Nels Paulson, University of Wisconsin - Stout
Discussant:
Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christian University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 387: MEDIA CONSTRUCTIONS: VIOLENCE, GENDER, AND JUSTICE
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Drew Humphries, Rutgers University - Camden
Examining the Influence of Race on the Presentation of Femicide in the News: Does Perpetrator Race, Victim Race or Racial Dyad
Matter?
Eugena A. Givens, University of South Florida
Lane Kirkland Gillespie, University of South Florida
Tara N. Richards, Appalachian State University
Law and Order's Construction of Rape: Changes 1990-1999
Drew Humphries, Rutgers University - Camden
TFLN: Challenging Contemporary Ideas of Sexual Victimization
Emily Bonistall, University of Delaware
Discussant:
Dawn K. Cecil, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg
195
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 388: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY IN CYBERSPACE: THE EFFECTS OF
WARNING AND SURVEILLANCE ON HACKERS’ ON-LINE ACTIVITIES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Surveillance Cues and Users Computer Usage
Theodor Wilson, University of Maryland
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Michel Cukier, University of Maryland
Hackers Beware! Does a Warning Banner Shape Hackers' Attacks?
Mariel Alper, University of Maryland
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Bertrand Sobesto, University of Maryland
Michel Cukier, University of Maryland
From Victims to Criminals: Crimes Performed and Victims Targeted by Zombie Computers
Bertrand Sobesto, University of Maryland
Michel Cukier, University of Maryland
David Maimon, University of Maryland
CCTV in Cyberspace? Testing the Effectiveness of Monitoring and Surveillance on Computer Trespassing
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Mariel Alper, University of Maryland
Bertrand Sobesto, University of Maryland
Michel Cukier, University of Maryland
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 389: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES IN CRIME CONTROL POLICY TRANSFER
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and Political Science
Urban Security in Europe: Findings from Project URBIS
Adam Edwards, Cardiff University
Gordon Hughes, Cardiff University
Exploring Transatlantic Policy Transfer: Convergence and Resistance in British Policing Policy
Trevor Jones, Cardiff University
Hoodies, Hounds and Harm Reduction: U.S. Influences on U.K. Responses
Claire Lawson, Cardiff University / RSPCA
Discussant:
Tim Newburn, London School of Economics and Political Science
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 390: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, PART II: A STATE
PERSPECTIVE
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Moderator:
Stan Orchowsky, Justice Research and Statistics Association
196
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Presenters:
Mark Myrent, Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority
Mary Ann Dyar, Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority
Jordan Boulger, Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority
Leslie Landis, Circuit Court of Cook County, IL Domestic Violence Division
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 391: OUTCOMES OF YOUTH IN THE JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEM: NEW FINDINGS
FROM THE NORTHWESTERN JUVENILE PROJECT
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Linda Teplin, Northwestern University
Psychosocial Determinants and Racial/Ethnic Disparities in Early Violent Death: A Prospective Study of Delinquent Youth
Marquita Stokes, Northwestern University
Leah J. Welty, Northwestern University
Karen M. Abram, Northwestern University
Nichole D. Olson, Northwestern University
Jessica A. Jakubowski, Northwestern University
Development and Persistence of Alcohol and Drug Use Disorders: A Longitudinal Study of Delinquent Youth
Anna J. Harrison, Northwestern University
Karen M. Abram, Northwestern University
Leah J. Welty, Northwestern University
Kathleen P. McCoy, Northwestern University
Linda Teplin, Northwestern University
Trajectories of Substance Use Disorders: A 12-Year Longitudinal Study of Delinquent Youth
Jennifer A. Hershfield, Northwestern University
Leah J. Welty, Northwestern University
Linda Teplin, Northwestern University
Karen M. Abram, Northwestern University
Patterns of Comorbid Psychiatric Disorders over Time: A Five-Year Longitudinal Study of Youth in the Juvenile Justice System
Nichole D. Olson, Northwestern University
Karen M. Abram, Northwestern University
Naomi N. Zwecker, Northwestern University
Leah J. Welty, Northwestern University
Linda Teplin, Northwestern University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 392: DISCOVERING DESISTANCE: INCREASING AND USING KNOWLEDGE ABOUT
DESISTING FROM CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Producing A Film on Desistance from an International Perspective
Fergus McNeill, University of Glasgow
Knowledge Exchange Workshops on Desistance
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
Thinking about Desistance
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Discussant:
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
197
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 393: DISCOVERING AIRPORT SECURITY: THE INTERACTION BETWEEN PEOPLE,
PLACES, BUSINESS, SECURITY AND CRIME PREVENTION
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Richard L. Legault, U.S. Department of Homeland Security
The Interaction between Law Enforcement and Security at Airports: Findings from the GMU Assessment of TSA’s Comprehensive
Security Strategy
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
Procedural Justice and Legitimacy in Airport Security: Findings from the GMU Assessment of TSA’s Comprehensive Security
Strategy
Devon Johnson, George Mason University
Screening and Profiling in Israeli Airports
Badi Hasisi, The Hebrew University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 394: ANTI-CIVIL RIGHTS ACTIVISM IN MISSISSIPPI AND NORTH CAROLINA, 19551975
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Geoff Ward, University of California, Irvine
Social Movement Mobilization and Anti-Civil Rights Enforcement: Comparing the Mississippi and North Carolina Civil Rights
Movements, 1955-1970
Daniel Thomas Kryder, Brandeis University
David Cunningham, Brandeis University
Geoff Ward, University of California, Irvine
Vigilantism Reconsidered: Threat, Networks, and KKK Membership
David Cunningham, Brandeis University
Jaleh Jalili, Brandeis University
Molly Schneider, Brandeis University
Fuzzy Logics of Ku Klux Klan Mobilization in Civil Rights-Era North Carolina: Spatial and Structural Aspects of Intermediate and
Formal Action
Peter Owens, University of California, Irvine
David Cunningham, Brandeis University
Geoff Ward, University of California, Irvine
The Record of Anti-Civil Rights Violence and Reprisal: Tales from an Event Database
Geoff Ward, University of California, Irvine
Nicholas David Petersen, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 395: EMPLOYMENT AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Julie Horney, Pennsylvania State University
Do Illegal Market Incentives Affect Participation in Legitimate Employment?
Holly Nguyen, University of Maryland
198
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Thomas A. Loughran, University of Maryland
Jeff Fagan, Columbia University
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
The Effects of Educational Level, Employment, and Income Support on Serious Offending
Janna Verbruggen, VU University Amsterdam
Victor van der Geest, VU University Amsterdam
Arjan Blokland, NSCR
Work Instability and Crime among Adult Male Offenders
Robert Apel, Rutgers University - Newark
Julie Horney, Pennsylvania State University
Discussant:
Ross Matsueda, University of Washington
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 396: DEFENDING VETERANS ENTANGLED IN THE COURTS: LEGAL AND ETHICAL
SOLUTIONS AND STRATEGIES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
William Brown, Western Oregon University
Hard Core Blood and Guts Criminal Defense for Veterans
William J. Sheppard, Sheppard, White and Kachergus, P.A.
Defending Our Institutionalized Veterans: Bringing PTSD and Co-Morbid Disorders at Pre-Trial, Trial, and Sentencing Stages
Robert R. Fischer, Federal Defenders of Eastern Washington and Idaho
Early Results of the War on Terror on Crime and Punishment: A Sociological Legal and Psychological Weather Report
Robert G. Stanulis, Forensic Psychology & Neuropsychology
The Past is Prologue: Veterans with TBI (Traumatic Brain Injury) and PTSD (Posttraumatic Stress Disorder) in Criminal Justice
Eric H. Schweitzer, Schweitzer & Davidian A.P.C.
MEETING
SESSION 397: OUTSTANDING ARTICLE AWARD COMMITTEE MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 1, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 398: DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME GENERAL BUSINESS MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 399: DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY GENERAL MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
TRIBUTE SESSION
SESSION 400: TRIBUTE TO HUGO ADAM BEDAU
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Montrose 5, 7th Floor
199
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
MEETING
SESSION 401: ASC MENTORING COMMITTEE MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 402: GREAT AMERICAN CITY: CHICAGO AND THE ENDURING NEIGHBORHOOD
EFFECT
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chair:
James F. Short, Jr., Washington State University
Author
Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University
Critics
Robert Bursik, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Jens Ludwig, University of Chicago
Alex Kotlowitz, Author, There Are No Children Here
SESSION 403: VICTIMIZATION RISK OVER TIME: RESEARCH FINDINGS FROM THE NCVS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Maribeth Rezey, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Female Victims: Risk Factors for Violent Victimization by Crime Type
Julie Ahmad Siddique, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Relationship between Adult Role Statuses and the Risk of Victimization
Stacey J. Bosick, University of Colorado - Denver
Callie Marie Rennison, University of Colorado - Denver
The Role of Marital Status in Women’s Risk for Violent Victimization
Maribeth Rezey, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 404: THE EFFECTS OF SENTENCING POLICIES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kathleen Auerhahn, Temple University
Minority Threat and the War on Drugs: An Analysis of Prison Drug Admissions in California Counties
Benjamin Fleury-Steiner, University of Delaware
Lionel Smith, University of Delaware
Tanya Whittle, University of Delaware
The Effects of State Sentencing Reforms on Sentence Length and Time-Served: A Multilevel Analysis
Rodney Engen, University of Arkansas
Mindy Bradley, University of Arkansas
The Implementation of 2009 Drug Law Reforms in New York: A Treatment Provider's Perspective
Robert Daniel Riggs, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / Vera Institute of Justice
Jim Parsons, Vera Institute of Justice
Two Eras of U.S. Sentencing Policy and the Production of Aging Prison Populations
Kathleen Auerhahn, Temple University
200
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 405: UNDERSCORING THE NEED FOR POLICE-COMMUNITY COLLABORATION
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Adam Karl Matz, American Probation and Parole Association
Boomtown Policing: Fighting Crime and Disorder during a Resource Boom
Rick Ruddell, University of Regina
Thomas Matthew, California State University, Chico
The Mississippi is Just a River: A Comparison of Local Responses to Human Trafficking
Erin C. Heil, Southern Illinois University, Edwardsville
Andrea Nichols, St. Louis Community College
Community Pharmacists as Defacto Cops: Responding to Drug Problems through Police Partnerships
Julianne Webster, Griffith University
Policy Implications of Police-Probation/Parole Partnerships
Adam Karl Matz, American Probation and Parole Association
SESSION 406: OFFENDER REHABILITATION AND PRISONER REENTRY
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Reuben Miller, Loyola University Chicago
Important Aspects of Reentry
Mirlinda Ndrecka, University of Cincinnati
Reform Optimism and the Legacies of American Protestantism
David Green, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
The Search for the Tipping Point on Prison Inmate Rehabilitation Invigorated: Implications for Offender Rehabilitation and Recidivism
Charles Ubah, Georgia College & State University
Devolving the Carceral State
Reuben Miller, Loyola University Chicago
SESSION 407: PUBLIC POLICY AND CORPORATE HARMS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lloyd Klein, St. Francis College
Criminal Negligence or Bad Practice? The I-35W Bridge Collapse in Minneapolis, Minnesota as an Example of State Crime of
Omission
Casey Schotter, University of Northern Iowa
Gayle Rhineberger-Dunn, University of Northern Iowa
Harms at Railroad Crossings: Intersecting Public and Private Domains
Travis Milburn, Eastern Kentucky University
Piracy Redefined: Results from the Contemporary Maritime Piracy Database - 2001 to 2010
Anamika Twyman-Ghoshal, Endicott College
Reverse Redlining: The Racialization of the American Dream
Laura A. Patterson, Shippensburg University
SESSION 408: UNDERSTANDING THE IMPACT OF VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Derek Mason, Bowling Green State University
201
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Life After Tragedy: A Survivor Informed Approach to Understanding the Needs of Homicide and Suicide Survivors
Jeanna M. Mastrocinque, University of Rochester Medical Center
Jed Metzger, Nazareth College
Peter K. Navratil, PJ Consulting
Catherine Cerulli, University of Rochester Medical Center
Perceptions of Commercially Sexually Exploited Girls: The Role of Perceiver Similarity in Attributions of Blame
Cortney A. Franklin, Sam Houston State University
Tasha A. Menaker, Sam Houston State University
A New Normal: Exploring the Impact of Homicide on Surviving Family Members
Derek Mason, Bowling Green State University
Christine M. Englebrecht, Bowling Green State University
Peggy Adams, Bowling Green State University
SESSION 409: OFFENDER INTERVENTION POLICIES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Megan Bears Augustyn, University of Maryland
Decriminalizing Mentally Ill Offenders through Salutogenic Models of Inquiry
Adam Vaughan, Simon Fraser University
Gender Responsive Probation Model Outcome Evaluation
Lindsey Devers, Justice Research Center / CSR Incorporated
Stephanie Bontrager Ryon, The Justice Research Center
Kristin Winokur Early, Justice Research Center
Greg Hand, Justice Research Center
Electronic Monitoring of Offenders: A Systematic Review of Its Effect on Recidivism in the Criminal Justice System
Francis Taylor, Police Service of Northern Ireland
Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge / Hebrew University
Procedural Justice and the Serious Adolescent Offender
Megan Bears Augustyn, University of Maryland
SESSION 410: 6TH ANNUAL WORKSHOP ON STATE CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Dawn L. Rothe, Old Dominion University
SESSION 411: BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY: MYRIAD INFLUENCES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Aaron Sell, Griffith University
Race Differences in Intelligence, Family Adversity, and Externalizing Problems in a Nationally Representative Sample of Children
Brian B. Boutwell, Sam Houston State University
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
John Paul Wright, University of Cincinnati
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
Risk-Taking and Self-Regulation: A Systematic Review of Age Effects in Analyses of Delinquency Outcomes
Michelle Evans-Chase, University of Pennsylvania
Minseop Kim, University of Pennsylvania
Huiquan Zhou, Chinese University of Hong Kong
The Relationship between Psychopathy, Arousal, and Decisions to Offend
J. Andrew Colarusso, Sam Houston State University
Holly A. Miller, Sam Houston State University
Jeffery A. Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
202
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Violence and Physical Strength in the Human Male: An Evolutionary Analysis
Aaron Sell, Griffith University
SESSION 412: GENTRIFICATION, FORECLOSURES, AND NEIGHBORHOOD CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Johanna Lacoe, New York University
Gentrification and Crime in New York City, 1980-2010
Michael S. Barton, University at Albany, SUNY
Gentrification and Crime: Examining this Aspect of Urban Change from a Control Perspective
Kathryn Noe Kozey, University of Maryland
The Relationship between Foreclosures and Crime in Washington, DC and Miami, FL
Kathy Pettit, The Urban Institute
Meagan Cahill, The Urban Institute
Variation in the Impact of Foreclosures on Neighborhood Crime: Evidence from Chicago, Miami, and New York City
Johanna Lacoe, New York University
Ingrid Gould Ellen, New York University
SESSION 413: JUVENILE SEX OFFENDING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Deborah Ann Sibila, Sam Houston State University
Juvenile Sex Reoffending Patterns and Implications for Juvenile Justice Responses
Raechel Lizon, Utah Administrative Office of the Courts
Rob Butters, University of Utah
Mindy J. Vanderloo, University of Utah
Michael J. Tanana, University of Utah
Sex Offender Recidivism Revisited: Review of Recent Meta-Analyses on the Effects of Sex Offender Treatment
Bitna Kim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Peter Benekos, Mercyhurst University
Alida Merlo, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Sex, Tech, Teens, and the Law
Deborah Ann Sibila, Sam Houston State University
Natalia Del Rocio Tapia, Lewis University
Wendi Pollock, Stephen F. Austin State University
SESSION 414: QUANTITATIVE ANALYSES OF OFFICIAL DATA
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Heather Burns, Seattle University
Still a ‘Census’? An Exploratory Approach to the 2005 BJS Forensic Lab Census Survey Data
Jessica Meckes, Indiana University Bloomington
Karen Kafadar, Indiana University Bloomington
Exploring NIBRS Data with a Relational Database
Douglas E. Salane, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Eman Abdu, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Peter Shenkin, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Correcting for Selection Bias in Pretrial Release Recommendation Research
Jie Xu, New York City Criminal Justice Agency
203
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Why Do the UCR and NCVS Show Convergence? A Time Series Modeling-Based Explanation
Sami Ansari, Salem State University
SESSION 415: THE ROLE OF PARENTS AND THE FAMILY IN JUVENILE JUSTICE
PROCEEDINGS AND OUTCOMES
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Natalie Kroovand Hipple, Michigan State University
A Closer Look at Family Group Conferencing in Juvenile Justice
Kelly Waltman-Spreha, Temple University
Children Left Behind: A Look at the Termination of Parental Rights Due to Incarceration
David Nicholson, Missouri Western State University
Parents in Youth Court: Participants, Supervisors or Observers?
Kim Varma, Ryerson University
Examining the Effects of Family Deprivation, Police Presence and Prosecutorial Caseload on Status Crime Outcomes
D. A. Bowers, University of South Alabama
S. E. Costanza, University of South Alabama
Using Family Group Conference Observations to Revisit Youthful Offenders and Recidivism over the Long Term
Natalie Kroovand Hipple, Michigan State University
Jeff Gruenewald, University of Arkansas
SESSION 416: FRIENDSHIP NETWORKS AND DELINQUENCY
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Owen Gallupe, Simon Fraser University
Behavioral Heterogeneity in Adolescent Friendship Networks
Carter Rees, Arizona State University
Callie Harbin Burt, Arizona State University
Defining Best Friends for Measuring Delinquency Associations
Brooks Louton, Arizona State University
Carter Rees, Arizona State University
The Ugly Duckling: Juvenile Delinquents in Non-Delinquent Networks
Hubert Nguyen, California State University, Long Beach
Situational Network Influences on Delinquency
Owen Gallupe, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 417: INFORMING EFFORTS TO REDUCE TERRORISM
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Maartje van der Woude, Leiden Law School
Difficulties in Combating Terror Financing
Dean C. Alexander, Western Illinois University
Counter Terrorism in the 21st Century: Future Strategies
Charles Lieberman, CUNY Graduate Center
Counterterrorist Crimmigration and the Dutch Legislature: Analyzing the Internal – External Security Nexus
Maartje van der Woude, Leiden Law School
204
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Righteous Guys: Inmate Leadership and the Prisoner De-Radicalization Movement
Mark S. Hamm, Indiana State University
SESSION 418: FAMILY VIOLENCE: CHILD ABUSE, CHILD-TO-PARENT ABUSE, AND MUTUAL
VIOLENCE
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Murray A. Straus, University of New Hampshire
Adolescent-to-Parent Violence: Exploring the Silence
Rachel Condry, University of Oxford
Caroline Miles, University of Oxford
Impacts of Marital Conflicts on Future Delinquency of the Child: A Review and Synthesis of Recent Literature
Minjung Kim, Florida State University
Steven Michael Lemmey, Florida State University
Examining the Cycle of Violence: The Intergenerational Transmission of Intimate Partner Violence and Child Maltreatment
Jordyn L. Rosario, Florida State University
Relation of Violence between Parents of University Students to Students’ Criminogenic Beliefs, Assaults on Dating Partners, and
Property Crime: A Comparison of Father-Only, Mother-Only, and Mutual Parental Violence
Murray A. Straus, University of New Hampshire
Yahayra Michel-Smith, University of New Hampshire
SESSION 419: INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE
COURSES II
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Jennifer L. Schulenberg, University of Waterloo
Justice Student Perceptions of POGIL Techniques: Benefits and Problems
Allan Barnes, University of Alaska Anchorage
The Effect of a Collaborative Freshman Seminar on Enhancing Collegiate Educational Careers
Leslie Brooke Hill, Florida State University
Criminal Justice Conspiracy Theories and Deficiencies in Critical Thinking Skills
Christian Diederich, University of Cincinnati
Derek Cohen, University of Cincinnati
The Master's Comprehensive Exam in Criminal Justice Education: An Exploratory Study
Angela Taylor, Fayetteville State University
Robert Brown, Fayetteville State University
Kenethia L. McIntosh Fuller, North Carolina Central University
Lorenzo M. Boyd, Fayetteville State University
SESSION 420: RATIONAL CHOICE THEORY AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gary Kleck, Florida State University
A Quantitative Analysis of the Seductions of Crime in a Sample of Criminal Offenders
Peter B. Wood, Eastern Michigan University
James A. Wilson, Russell Sage Foundation
David May, Mississippi State University
Beyond Rational Choice: The Case for a Hot/Cool Perspective of Criminal Decision-Making
Jean-Louis van Gelder, NSCR, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
205
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Measured Success: Rational Choice Theory and Terrorists' Use of Suicide Operations
Dennis Ferrick, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Adult Unemployment and Serious Property Crime: A National Case-Control Study
Gary Kleck, Florida State University
Dylan Baker Jackson, Florida State University
SESSION 421: OFFENDING TACTICS FOR TERRORISTS AND OTHER BAD PEOPLE
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Darren K. Stocker, Cumberland County College
Hunting Ground: Online Sexual Predators
Hasan T. Arslan, Western New England University
Kidnapping as 'Public Good': Framing Nigeria's Oil Insurgency
Temitope Oriola, University of Alberta
Terrorist Targeting and Tactic Patterns over Time
Rose Bellandi, University at Albany, SUNY
Bioterrorism and Global Adversity: Revisiting Past Perspectives and Contemporary Concerns
Darren K. Stocker, Cumberland County College
Charles J. Kocher, Cumberland County College
Tina M. Raquet, Brennan and Associates, P.C.
Patricia M. Griffin, Saint Joseph's University
SESSION 422: POLICE RECRUITMENT, TECHNOLOGY, AND ALCOHOL
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kim S. Menard, Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
Low Self-Control and Deviant Behavior among Police Recruits and Undergraduate Criminal Justice Students
Paul Reynolds, Texas State University
Dustin Eicke, Texas State University
Digital Dirt: The Legal Effects on Law Enforcement Careers
Jill Joline Myers, Western Illinois University
Todd Lough, Western Illinois University
Drunk Driving Cops: A Study of Police Officers Arrested for DUI, 2005-2010
Philip M. Stinson, Bowling Green State University
John Liederbach, Bowling Green State University
Natalie Erin Todak, Arizona State University
Steven L. Brewer, Pennsylvania State University, Shenango
Sex Differences in PTSD Symptomology and Drinking Problems among American Police Officers
Kim S. Menard, Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
Michael L. Arter, Pennsylvania State University, Altoona
SESSION 423: ROUNDTABLE: TEACHING ABOUT RACE, CLASS, AND GENDER IN
CRIMINOLOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kate Luther, Pacific Lutheran University
Discussants:
Rebecca Hayes, Central Michigan University
Kate Luther, Pacific Lutheran University
Susan Caringella, Western Michigan University
206
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 424: ROUNDTABLE: LEMAS: A TWENTY-FIVE YEAR OVERVIEW AND ASSESSMENT
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
William R. King, Sam Houston State University
Discussants:
Edward Maguire, American University
Robert Langworthy, University of Central Florida
Jeremy M. Wilson, Michigan State University
Charles M. Katz, Arizona State University
Melissa S. Morabito, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Jeremy M. Wilson, Michigan State University
Brad Smith, Wayne State University
SESSION 425: ROUNDTABLE: NEW AND ONGOING ISSUES IN DATA COLLECTION OF
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE, SEXUAL VIOLENCE, AND STALKING
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
New and Ongoing Issues in the Collection of Surveillance Data on Intimate Partner Violence, Sexual Violence, and Stalking
Victimization
Sharon G. Smith, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Matthew Breiding, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Kathleen Basile, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Michele Black, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Discussant:
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
SESSION 426: ROUNDTABLE: ORGANIZED CRIME, SITUATIONAL CRIME PREVENTION, AND
ROUTINE ACTIVITY THEORY
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Edward R. Kleemans, VU University Amsterdam / WODC, The Hague
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
Klaus von Lampe, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Danielle M. Reynald, Griffith University
SESSION 427: ROUNDTABLE: POLICE TRAINING AND HANDLING OF FORENSIC EVIDENCE
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Patrick Ibe, Albany State University
Hamin Shabazz, Stevenson University
Evaristus Obinyan, Clark Atlanta University
SESSION 428: POST-INCARCERATION EXPERIENCES AMONG WOMEN AND OTHER
DISADVANTAGED GROUPS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
LaTosha L. Traylor, University of Illinois at Chicago
Criminogenic Factors of Female Inmates in Correctional Facilities in Pennsylvania
Hye Sun Kim, Worcester State University
Individual- and Community-Level Predictors of Re-Arrest and Re-Conviction for Parolees
Douglas J. Boyle, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Joseph E. Pascarella, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Laura M. Ragusa-Salerno, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Andrea Marcus, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
207
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Where Are They Now? Women’s Life Trajectories Post-Incarceration
Maureen Norton-Hawk, Suffolk University
Mary Ellen Mastrorilli, Boston University
A Second, First Time: Black Women Mothering Post-Incarceration
LaTosha L. Traylor, University of Illinois at Chicago
SESSION 429: GENDER AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Incarcerated Daughters: The Intergenerational Complexity of Incarcerated Women and Maternity
Elizabeth Whalley, University of Colorado
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Dana DeHart, University of South Carolina
Bonnie L. Green, Georgetown University
Girlhood Violence in Canada: Youth Court Statistics and Feminist Criminological Explanations
Jennifer Silcox, University of Western Ontario
Reassessing Patriarchal Ideologies and Violence against Women from a Feminist Perspective
Jesse R. McKee, Old Dominion University
Dianne Cyr Carmody, Old Dominion University
Doing Gender, Identity and Crime Inside and Outside Prison
Hannah Willis, Morehead State University
Rebecca Sue Katz, Morehead State University
SESSION 430: FAMILY VIOLENCE AND YOUTHFUL VIOLENT OFFENDERS
Thursday, November 15 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Deanna L. Wilkinson, Ohio State University
Patricide and Step-Patricide: Victim, Offender, and Incident Characteristics
Kathleen M. Heide, University of South Florida
Eldra P. Solomon, Center for Mental Health, Tampa
The Impact of Offender Characteristics on Injury during Robbery
Adele Costigan, Pennsylvania State University
Violent Crimes and Mob Justice in Nigeria
Obi N. I. Ebbe, University of Tennessee
Assessing the Harm of High Risk Violent Offenders: Criminal Careers in Ohio
Deanna L. Wilkinson, Ohio State University
Aaron Hatchett, Ohio State University
Jeffrey Welbaum, Office of the Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 431: PROSECUTORIAL AND JUDICIAL STRATEGIES FOR DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
CASES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Richard Peterson, New York City Criminal Justice Agency
208
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Examining the Impact of Case Screening Procedures on Intimate Partner Violence Case Outcomes and Offender Recidivism
Erica L. Smith, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Strategies to Increase the Conviction Rate in Domestic Violence Cases
Richard Peterson, New York City Criminal Justice Agency
Reducing Opportunities for Witness Intimidation in Domestic Violence Cases
M. Elaine Borakove, The Justice Management Institute
Does Judicial Oversight Deter Re-Offense among Domestic Violence Offenders? Results of a Randomized Trial
Melissa Labriola, Center for Court Innovation
Amanda Cissner, Center for Court Innovation
Michael Rempel, Center for Court Innovation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 432: EVIDENCE-BASED CRIME POLICY I
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Brandon C. Welsh, Northeastern University
The Effects of Hot Spots Policing on Crime: An Updated Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Anthony A. Braga, Rutgers University / Harvard University
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
David M. Hureau, Harvard University
Mass Transit Policing: The London Underground Hot Spots Experiment
Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge / Hebrew University
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
The Intersection of Race and Place in Police Discretion to Divert Juveniles
Charlotte E. Gill, George Mason University
Restorative Justice: The Effects of Face-to-Face Conferencing Following Personal Victim Crimes
Heather Strang, Cambridge University / Australian National University
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 433: CRIME AND JUSTICE IN AMERICA, 1975-2025: DRUGS, GUNS, RACE, VIOLENCE
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chair:
Michael Tonry, University of Minnesota / NSCR
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Guns
Philip J. Cook, Duke University
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Drugs
Peter Reuter, University of Maryland
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Youth Violence
Franklin Zimring, University of California, Berkeley
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Race and Crime
Jeff Fagan, Columbia University
209
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 434: THE BIOSOCIAL FOUNDATIONS TO ANTISOCIAL PHENOTYPES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Exploring the Causes and Consequences Associated with Empathy: Findings from a Longitudinal Sample of Adult Twins
Meghan E. Wilde Rowland, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
Examining the Link between Indicators of Malnutrition and Low Self-Control
Dylan Baker Jackson, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
The Relationship between Low Self-Control and Psychopathy
Joshua S. May, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
Examining the Associations among Neuropsychological Deficits, Family Adversity, and Antisocial Outcomes in a Nationally
Representative Sample
Cassidy Tevlin, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 435: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON THEORY AND CULTURE
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Donald J. Shoemaker, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Control Surplus and its Effect on Deviance within Hotels
Njeri Kershaw, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Integrating Theories within a Developmental Model
Kat Payne, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Culture Clash: Investigating Micro-Level Cultural Conflict Using Black’s Theory of Moral Time
Angela Barlow, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Cultural Predictors of Crime: A Cross-National Analysis
Travis F. Whalen, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 436: MONITORING HIGH-RISK SEX OFFENDERS WITH GPS TECHNOLOGY:
FINDINGS FROM AN EVALUATION OF THE CALIFORNIA PAROLE SUPERVISION PROGRAM
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephen V. Gies, Development Services Group, Inc.
Using GPS Technology to Monitor High-Risk Sex Offenders: A Practical Guide
Stephen V. Gies, Development Services Group, Inc.
Denise Milano, California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation
Turn Left, Then Take Second Right: A Methodological Approach to Evaluating High-Risk Sex Offenders under GPS Supervision
Eoin Healy, Development Services Group, Inc.
Stephen V. Gies, Development Services Group, Inc.
Randy Gainey, Old Dominion University
Dan Duplantier, Development Services Group, Inc.
210
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Monitoring High-Risk Sex Offenders with GPS Technology: Findings from an Evaluation of the California Parole Supervision
Program
Randy Gainey, Old Dominion University
Stephen V. Gies, Development Services Group, Inc.
Eoin Healy, Development Services Group, Inc.
Dan Duplantier, Development Services Group, Inc.
The Implementation of a GPS Monitoring System to Supervise High-Risk Sex Offenders in the Community: An Assessment of
Program Fidelity and Cost
Stephen V. Gies, Development Services Group, Inc.
Randy Gainey, Old Dominion University
Eoin Healy, Development Services Group, Inc.
Dan Duplantier, Development Services Group, Inc.
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 437: CRIMINALIZATION AND COMMUNITY: CULTURAL CRIMINOLOGICAL
PERSPECTIVES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Keith Hayward, University of Kent
In Search of Security as a Positive Notion
Marc Schuilenburg, VU University Amsterdam
Wagner in Israel: A Mixture of Music and Politics
Dina Siegel, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Turkish Dutch Youngsters in the Netherlands: The Relation between Poor Incorporation, Crime and Radicalization
Richard Staring, Erasmus University Rotterdam
Fiore Geelhoed, VU University Amsterdam
Prohibiting the Burqa: Critical Reflections
Fiore Geelhoed, VU University Amsterdam
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 438: HUMAN TRAFFICKING: MEASUREMENT CHALLENGES AND EMPIRICAL
ADVANCES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
Macro, Meso and Micro Approaches for Analyzing Human Trafficking
Ernesto Savona, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Measuring Labor Trafficking with Respondent Driven Sampling: A San Diego Study
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
Brian Finch, San Diego State University
Towards a Council of Europe Scorecard for Anti-THB Policies
Jan Van Dijk, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
The Palermo Protocol: Experiences and Prospects of Measuring the Severity of Trafficking in Persons
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
211
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 439: CRIME AND PLACE: ROUTINE ACTIVITIES, LIFESTYLES, AND CRIME RISK
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
Crime Risk, Day and Night
Jonathan G. Allen, Texas State University
Carlos Carcach, Escuela Superior de Economia y Negocios, El Salvador
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
Violent Victimization Risk in Five Daily Activity Domains
Ward A. Adams, Texas State University
Andrew Lemieux, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
Youth Hangout Scenarios and Crime: Afternoon and Evening
Jose R. Agustina, Universitat Internacional de Catalunya (Barcelona, Spain)
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
Barroom Incidents as the Night Progresses
Steve Geoffrion, University of Montreal
Remi Boivin, Université de Montréal
Frederic Ouellet, University of Montreal
Marcus Felson, Texas State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 440: LONG-TERM EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATIONS OF DEVELOPMENTAL
PREVENTION PROGRAMS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
Effects of an Early Universal Intervention on Adolescent Delinquency and Substance Use
Manuel Peter Eisner, University of Cambridge
Ingrid Obsuth, University of Cambridge
Long-Term Evaluation of a Parent- and Child-Oriented Prevention Program: From Preschool to Adolescence
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
Stefanie Jaursch, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Daniela Runkel, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Mark Stemmler, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Pathways Explaining the Reduction of Adult Criminal Behavior by a Randomized Preventive Intervention for Disruptive Kindergarten
Children
Frank Vitaro, University of Montreal
Edward D. Barker, Birkbeck University
Mara Brendgen, University of Quebec
Richard E. Tremblay, University of Montreal
Discussant:
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
212
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 441: CONSIDERING THE SPATIAL DIMENSION OF SOCIAL NETWORKS, SOCIAL
CAPITAL, COLLECTIVE EFFICACY, AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
Collective Efficacy, Cohesion, and “Neighborhood”: Is There a There There?
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
Adam Boessen, University of California, Irvine
Neighborhoods and Space: Situating Residents' Networks
Adam Boessen, University of California, Irvine
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
Carter T. Butts, University of California, Irvine
Nicholas Nagle, University of Tennessee
Zack Almquist, University of California, Irvine
Chris Marcum, RAND Corporation
Ryan Acton, University of Massachusetts Amherst
From Norms to Action? Examining the Impact of Neighborhood Collective Efficacy on Resident’s Problem-Solving Behavior
Rebecca Wickes, University of Queensland
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
Elise Sargeant, University of Queensland
A Longitudinal Examination of the Effects of Local Institutions on Neighborhood Crime
James C. Wo, University of California, Irvine
John Hipp, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 442: SPATIAL MODELS OF CRIMINAL GROUPS AND CRIME PATTERN FORMATION
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
P. Jeffrey Brantingham, University of California, Los Angeles
Fear of Crime and Tourism: A Spatial Examination of the Impact of Crime on Destination Choice
Robert T. Greenbaum, Ohio State University
Garyn S. Greene, Ohio State University
Geographic Patterns of Field Interviews: Examining the Context of Encounters between Gang and Non-Gang Members and Police
Matthew Valasik, University of California, Irvine
Giulia Berlusconi, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
George Tita, University of California, Irvine
The Los Angeles Predictive Policing Experiment
P. Jeffrey Brantingham, University of California, Los Angeles
George E. Mohler, Santa Clara University
George Tita, University of California, Irvine
Dividing up the Pie: Modeling Gang Territory Formation Using Ecological Models with Self-Excitation
Martin B. Short, University of California, Los Angeles
P. Jeffrey Brantingham, University of California, Los Angeles
213
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 443: CRIMINAL JUSTICE RESEARCH AND EVALUATION: SOCIAL SCIENCE
RESEARCH AT THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF JUSTICE AND THE NATIONAL SCIENCE
FOUNDATION
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Winifred Lee Reed, National Institute of Justice
Overview of the Office of Research and Evaluation
Phyllis Newton, National Institute of Justice
Overview of the Justice Systems Research Division
Angela Moore, National Institute of Justice
Overview of the Crime, Violence and Victimization Research Division
Winifred Lee Reed, National Institute of Justice
Overview of the National Science Foundation’s Law and Social Sciences Program
Marjorie S. Zatz, National Science Foundation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 444: OPERATIONAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL DYNAMICS OF TERRORISM
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gary LaFree, University of Maryland
Trends in the World Wide Use of Improvised Explosive (IED) Attacks, 1970 to 2010
Michael Distler, University of Maryland
Gary LaFree, University of Maryland
Organizational Dynamics of Terrorist Groups and Movements
Erin Miller, University of Maryland
Testing a Social Disorganization Model of Terrorism and Crimes in the United States
Gary LaFree, University of Maryland
Bianca Bersani, University of Massachusetts Boston
MEETING
SESSION 445: JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY LUNCHEON
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 446: DIVISION OF VICTIMOLOGY EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 447: AMERICAN MEMORIES: ATROCITIES AND THE LAW
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Chair:
Gabrielle A. Ferrales, University of Minnesota
214
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Authors
Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota
Ryan D. King, University at Albany, SUNY
Critics
John Hagan, Northwestern University
David Garland, New York University
Nachman Ben-Yehuda, Hebrew University
SESSION 448: CONSEQUENCES OF VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Stacey Nofziger, University of Akron
Low Self-Control and Childhood Trauma as Factors Influencing Criminal Offending
David R. Forde, University of North Texas at Dallas
Stephen Baron, Queen's University
The Effect of Victimization on Health Outcomes: Similarities and Differences between Men and Women
Megan C. Stewart, Georgia Gwinnett College
Victimization Experiences and Future Substance Use among Adolescents: Do Type and Degree of Victimization Matter?
Gillian Mira Pinchevsky, University of South Carolina
Emily Wright, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
Violent Behavior by Abused and Neglected Children
Stacey Nofziger, University of Akron
Fear, Faith, and Trust: The Effect of Victimization on Fear and Trust by Religiosity
Martha Sherman, Baylor University
Kyle Irwin, Baylor University
Jeffrey A. Tamburello, Baylor University
SESSION 449: POLICING DIVERSE POPULATIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
Causes and Consequences of Racial Differentials in Police Contacts
Robert D. Crutchfield, University of Washington
Martie L. Skinner, University of Washington
Kevin P. Haggerty, University of Washington
Annie McGlynn, University of Washington
Richard Catalano, University of Washington
State Intervention and the Policing of Sri Lanka’s Commercial Sex Industry
Madeleine Novich, Rutgers University
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
Encounters between Police Officers and Undocumented Migrant Workers: A Descriptive Analysis
Shela A. Delgado, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Hung-En Sung, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Deysbel E Pena, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Amalia Paladino, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Policing Diversity: Examining Police Perceptions of Sex and Gender Diverse People
Toby Miles-Johnson, University of Queensland
215
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 450: POLICE COMMUNITY COLLABORATIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
David James Plebanski, Calumet College of St. Joseph
Community Policing and Contradictions of the Welfare State
Barry Goetz, Western Michigan University
Implementing Police-Community Corrections Partnerships: Organizational Change and Police Chiefs/Sheriffs' Attitude
Bitna Kim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Adam Karl Matz, American Probation and Parole Association
Jurg Gerber, Sam Houston State University
Dan Richard Beto, Texas Regional Community Policing Institute
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
Policing, Partnerships and Surveillance: Enhancing Social Control of the Mundane and Marginalized
Megan O'Neill, University of Salford
Bethan Loftus, University of Manchester
Public Safety Proficiency: Collaboration between Public Safety Organizations and Academia
David James Plebanski, Calumet College of St. Joseph
Michael McCafferty, Calumet College of St. Joseph
Dean Angelo, Calumet College of St. Joseph
SESSION 451: CORRECTIONAL CONTEXTS: IMPLICATIONS FOR POLICY
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Gunda Woessner, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
California's Public Safety Realignment: Stakes versus Risk
Julie Gerlinger, University of California, Irvine
Policy Distraction: Sentencing Reform Adoption as a Diversion from Rising Social Inequality
Mark G. Harmon, Portland State University
A Theory-Guided Approach in Designing an Internal Prison Classification – Using Machine Learning Methods
Tim Brennan, Northpointe Inc.
William Dieterich, Northpointe Inc.
William L. Oliver, Northpointe Inc.
Predicting Inmate Economic Conflict in Female Housing Units: Individual Factors versus Social Climate Factors
Polina Karpova, Eastern Kentucky University
Hannah Robbins, Eastern Kentucky University
James B. Wells, Eastern Kentucky University
Barbara Owen, California State University, Fresno
Peggy S. Keller, University of Kentucky
What Do We Gain from Early Parole Preparation Under Electronic Monitoring?
Gunda Woessner, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
SESSION 452: JUVENILE JUSTICE PRACTITIONERS AND THE POLITICAL RHETORIC OF
CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jonathan Wynne Evans, University of Glamorgan
Not Quite Treatment, Not Quite Punishment: A Case Study of American Juvenile Justice during the “Get Tough” Era
Michael Schlossman, Princeton University
216
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Resistance to Reform in Juvenile Justice Systems
Alexandra Cox, SUNY-New Paltz
Canadian Youth Justice Reform and the "Problem" of Violent and Repeat Youth Offenders
Ruth Mann, University of Windsor
Developing Non-Criminalizing Interventions with Anti-Social Behaviour
Jonathan Wynne Evans, University of Glamorgan
SESSION 453: PRISONER REENTRY FOR SEX OFFENDERS AND MENTALLY ILL OFFENDERS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
William H. Fisher, University of Massachusetts Lowell
I’m Coming Home: Exploring Organizational Barriers to Providing Reentry Services for Mentally Ill Offenders
Victoria Lauren Goldberg, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
The Collateral Consequences of Sex Offender Residency Restrictions
Beth M. Huebner, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Kimberly R. Kras, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Recidivism and Residency Restrictions: A Spatial Examination of Sex Offender Legislation
Erin Wolbeck, University of California, Riverside
Mental Health, Substance Abuse and Criminal History Factors in Recidivism among Persons with Psychiatric Disorders
William H. Fisher, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Stephanie Hartwell, University of Massachusetts Boston
Kristen Roy-Bujnowski, University of Massachusetts Boston
Xiaogang Deng, University of Massachusetts Boston
SESSION 454: INCARCERATED JUVENILES, INSTITUTIONAL CLASSIFICATION, AND
PROGRAMMING
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Garrett A. R. Yursza Warfield, Northeastern University
Boys to Men: Thinking about Juvenile Prison Violence and Victimization in Context
Kate Gooch, University of Birmingham, UK
Criminogenic Needs in Treatment of Juveniles: Inventory and Relevance
Lia Ahonen, Orebro University
Jürgen Degner, Orebro University
Prison-Based Debate and Dialogue: Cognitive Behavior Therapy
Johannes Wheeldon, Washington State University
Mental Health Needs in Risk-Based Corrections
Garrett A. R. Yursza Warfield, Northeastern University
SESSION 455: JUSTICE REFORM IN A CHANGING WORLD
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rose Johnson Bigler, Curry College
Criminal Justice Reform in Post-Conflict Environments: A Case Study of Corrections Reform in Kosovo
Danielle J. Murdoch, Simon Fraser University
Dayton Accord's Constitution of Exclusion of Roma and Jews
Laurence Armand French, University of New Hampshire
Nedzad Korajlic, University of Sarajevo
Goran Kovacevic, University of Sarajevo
217
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Contextual Limits of International Police Reform Efforts
Nathan Pino, Texas State University
Graham Ellison, Queen's University Belfast
The New Bidding War: The Proliferation of Military Goods through eBay
Kenneth Grundy, California State University, Long Beach
SESSION 456: ORGANIZED CRIME IN THE INTERNET AGE
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Chloé Provost, Université de Montréal
Anonymous Assessment: Evaluation of Anonymous' Online Media
Sarah Fitzgerald, Michigan State University
Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
Exploring the Possible Link between Organized Crime and Internet Gambling
James Byrne, University of Massachusetts Lowell
GUESS WHO? : Enablers behind a Web of Internet Sites Linked to the Hells Angels
Chloé Provost, Université de Montréal
David Decary-Hetu, University of Montreal
SESSION 457: ROBBERY VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
David N. Khey, Loyola University New Orleans
Spatio-Temporal Analysis of Robbery: A Case Study of Repeat Commercial Victim
Qiang Xu, Indiana University South Bend
Yu Zhou, Bowling Green State University
Jennifer Colanese, Indiana University South Bend
Walking ATM’s: Hispanic Robbery Victimization Pre- and Post-Hurricane Katrina in Metropolitan New Orleans
Vincenzo Antonio Sainato, Loyola University New Orleans
Dennis Thornton, Loyola University New Orleans
Lydia Voigt, Loyola University New Orleans
William Thornton, Loyola University New Orleans
David N. Khey, Loyola University New Orleans
Pathway to Crime: A Geospatial and Temporal Analysis of the Hispanic “Walking ATM” Victimization Phenomenon in Metropolitan
New Orleans, 2003-2011
David N. Khey, Loyola University New Orleans
Dennis Thornton, Loyola University New Orleans
William Thornton, Loyola University New Orleans
Lydia Voigt, Loyola University New Orleans
Vincenzo Antonio Sainato, Loyola University New Orleans
SESSION 458: ISSUES RELATED TO PRISON AND JAIL STAFF
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
Alienation, Power, and Burnout: Correctional Officer Attitudes toward the Inmate
Stephen C. McGuinn, University of Maryland
An Investigation on Turnover Intent of Rehabilitative Officers
Shuping Tzeng, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
218
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Investigating Corrections Officer’s Perceptions of “Safe” and “Unsafe” on the Job in Canadian Provincial Jails
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
SESSION 459: NEIGHBORHOODS AND FEAR OF CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nichole Tucker, Seattle University
Examining The Link Between Offending, The Neighborhood Context, and Fear Of Crime Among Probationers
Katheryn Zambrana, University of Florida
Jodi Lane, University of Florida
A Spatial Analysis of Neighborhood Residents’ Fear of Crime and Police Calls for Service
Rachel E. Stein, West Virginia University
Jamison Conley, West Virginia University
Clinton Davis, West Virginia University
Fear and Familiarity in the Mixed Neighborhood: The Role of Intergroup Interaction, Neighborhood Use, and Perceptions of Danger
Gwen van Eijk, Leiden University, The Netherlands
An Investigation of City Crime Prevention Efforts in a Seattle Urban Core Public Park
Nichole Tucker, Seattle University
Heather Burns, Seattle University
Michael Bossi, Seattle University
SESSION 460: PERCEPTIONS OF JUSTICE AND IMPLICATIONS FOR DESISTANCE
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Thomas Baker, Virginia Commonwealth University
Moral Identity and Negative Emotions: How do Reflected Appraisals affect the Propensity to Reoffend?
Shelley Keith Matthews, Mississippi State University
Heather L. Scheuerman, Towson University
Adult Crime, Adult Time? Public Punishment Preferences for Juvenile Felons
Riane Miller, University of South Carolina
Brandon K. Applegate, University of South Carolina
Relating Deviant Identities to Criminal Involvement and the Process of Desistance
Beverly R. Crank, Georgia State University
The Influence of the Criminal Justice System on Perceived Certainty of Punishment
Christi Falco, Florida State University
Thomas Baker, Virginia Commonwealth University
SESSION 461: GENDER AND CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Christine S. Sellers, University of South Florida
Gender, Crime, and the American Dream: A Micro-Level Test of Institutional Anomie Theory
Lisa R. Muftić, Georgia State University
Leah Daigle, Georgia State University
To be or Not to be Men: A Look at Strain Theory through Manhood and Reentry
Lebrian Alexander Patrick, Louisiana State University
Untangling the Heterogeneity in the Marriage Effect
Megan Bears Augustyn, University of Maryland
Amy Sariti Kamerdze, University of Maryland, College Park
Thomas A. Loughran, University of Maryland
219
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Integrating Gender into Social Learning Theory
Christine S. Sellers, University of South Florida
Brenda Sims Blackwell, Georgia State University
SESSION 462: SPATIAL ANALYSIS OF SEX OFFENSES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Marcus Antonio Galeste, Arizona State University
An Examination of Sex Offenders’ Spatial Mobility during the Stages of Sexual Assault Events
Amelie Pedneault, Simon Fraser University
Eric Beauregard, Simon Fraser University
Danielle Arlanda Harris, San Jose State University
Raymond A. Knight, Brandeis University
Spatio-Temporal Risk Assessment of Sexual Offenses in Newark, NJ
Rosalyn Theresa Bocker, Rutgers University
Danielle M. Rusnak, Rutgers University
The Spatial Nature of Outdoor Rape
Vania Ceccato, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
SESSION 463: ORGANIZED CRIME: INTERNATIONAL AND U.S. PERSPECTIVES
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jacqueline Johnson, Adelphi University
Nigerian Organized Crime
Obi N. I. Ebbe, University of Tennessee
The Australian Government's Executive Decision-Making on Organized Crime: Past, Present, and Future Directions
Sally Lohrisch, Queensland University of Technology
The Illegal Cigarette Market in the South Bronx: After a Tax Amendment
Jacqueline Johnson, Adelphi University
Klaus von Lampe, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Marin Kurti, Fordham University
SESSION 464: UNDERSTANDING TERRORISTS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
John G. Horgan, Pennsylvania State University
The Rising Threat of Female Security Violators with a Focus on the Russo-Chechen and Israeli-Palestinian Conflicts
Peter Michael O'Day, San Jose State University
The Changing Face of Female Participation in American Terrorism
Kayleigh Elise Damphousse, University of Oklahoma
Brent Lamar Smith, University of Arkansas
Predicting the Lifespan of a PKK Member after (S)he joins the Organization
Haci Duru, Turkish National Police
Tit for Tat: The PKK's Retaliation Strategy against Turkish Security Forces
Nadir Gergin, Turkish National Police
A Typology of Lone Actor Terrorists
Paul Gill, Pennsylvania State University
John G. Horgan, Pennsylvania State University
220
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 465: STUDENT PERCEPTIONS AND FEAR OF CRIME: IMPLICATIONS FOR SCHOOLS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David Nicholson, Missouri Western State University
Too Scared to Learn? The Academic Consequences of Feeling Unsafe at School
Johanna Lacoe, New York University
Understanding the “Code of Silence” in Schools: The Effect of School Context on Youths’ Willingness to Report Cheating, Bullying,
and Theft
Lee Ann Slocum, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Terrance J. Taylor, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Fear of Crime and Police Legitimacy: An Exploration of Student Perceptions
Justin Nicholas Crowl, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Attitudes and Reality: The Impact of Perceptions of Police on Students’ Victimization Reporting Behaviors
J. Veronica James, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 466: RESEARCH ON AGE AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michael J. Tanana, University of Utah
Study on the Age-Crime Relationship Using Longitudinal Self-Report Data
Jaeok Kim, University at Albany, SUNY
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Age and the Explanation of Crime, Revisited
Gary Sweeten, Arizona State University
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Robert Brame, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Understanding the Life Course of Juvenile Sex Offenders
Mindy J. Vanderloo, University of Utah
Michael J. Tanana, University of Utah
Rob Butters, University of Utah
Raechel Lizon, Utah Administrative Office of the Courts
SESSION 467: SEXUAL OFFENSES AND MINORS
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Corey R. Carlson, Prairie View A&M University
Techniques of Neutralization for Sexual Offenders
Patrick McGrain, Gwynedd-Mercy College
Teenage Sexting in America: Quantitative Results of an Exploratory Study
Renee Dorothy Lamphere, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Understanding the Sexual Abuse of Minors within Institutions
Karen Terry, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Contingent Crimes: The Sexual Abuse of Children by Clerics from a Situational/Routine Activities Perspective
Paul D. Steele, Morehead State University
221
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 468: EVALUATING PRISONER REENTRY PROGRAMS IV
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew Nelson, George Mason University
Backgrounds and Motivations of Faith-Based Halfway-House Volunteers
Andrew Stephen Denney, University of Louisville
Healing Communities Reentry Initiative: Congregation Member Perceptions and Their Impact on Participation in a Faith-Based
Program
Kerri Christina Legette, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Harold D. Trulear, Healing Communities Prison Ministry and Reentry Project
Understanding the Features and Effects of Parental Incarceration
Lorna Elaine Grant, North Carolina Central University
Risk as a Dynamic Need? An Examination of How Criminogenic Risk Mediates Need Changes
Matthew Nelson, George Mason University
Alese Wooditch, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
SESSION 469: POLICE-COMMUNITY PARTNERSHIPS TO PREVENT CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gorazd Mesko, University of Maribor, FCJS
Utilizing a Competitive Approach to Empower Citizens to Reduce Neighborhood Crime Victimization
Tammatha Clodfelter, Appalachian State University
Travis Pardue, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department
Beth Jackson, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department
John Kitchens, Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department
Community Signal: Report on a Project Making Citizens Responsible for Crime Prevention and Quality of Life in Their Community
Sjaak Khonraad, Avans University of Applied Sciences
Investigating the Effect of a Community Policing Unit on Partnership Formation by Local Police Departments
Hyon Namgung, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Assessing Police and Citizen Attitudes toward Police-Citizen Partnerships in Slovenia
Maja Jere, University of Maribor
Gorazd Mesko, University of Maribor, FCJS
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
SESSION 470: ROUNDTABLE: PRACTICING RESTORATIVE CIRCLES AT A JUVENILE HALL
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Mikhail Lyubansky, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mabinty Tarawallie, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Joey Merrin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Andrew Case, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Emily Gates, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
SESSION 471: ROUNDTABLE: PREPARING A NEW GENERATION OF TRANSLATIONAL
CRIMINOLOGISTS: IS IT TIME TO REFORM DOCTORAL EDUCATION IN CRIMINOLOGY AND
CRIMINAL JUSTICE?
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
John Klofas, Rochester Institute of Technology
222
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Discussants:
Geoffrey P. Alpert, University of South Carolina
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
Todd Clear, Rutgers University - Newark
Alan J. Lizotte, University at Albany, SUNY
James Marquart, University of Texas at Dallas
Kristina Rose, National Institute of Justice
Vincent J. Webb, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 472: ROUNDTABLE: RIGHTING THE 'WRONGS' OF VIOLENT YOUNG WOMEN
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Problematising Risk and Vulnerability in Young Women Who Offend
Michele Jane Burman, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
The Wrongs of Research: Writing about Young Women’s Violence and Victimization
Susan Anusas Batchelor, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
The "Jerry Springer Effect": Police Officers’ Portrayal of Young Women Regarded as Violent
Suzanne Young, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Contextualizing the Violent Offending of Young Women
Carla Cesaroni, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Holly Pelvin, University of Toronto
Doing Violence to Girls? Reflections on Media and Academic Representations of Young Women’s Violence
Gilly Sharpe, University of Sheffield
Suffering the Limitations: Violent Girls’ Experiences with Child Welfare
Judith A. Ryder, St. John's University
Robin A Robinson, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
SESSION 473: ROUNDTABLE: WOMEN, GENDER, AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Diagnosing the Past, Consequences for the Future: Incarcerated Women, PTSD, and Lifetime Adverse Experiences
Jennifer Hartsfield, Bridgewater State University
Susan F. Sharp, University of Oklahoma
Differences in the Probability of Arrest: A Longitudinal Study of the Influence of Sex, Race, and Co-Offending from 1996-2008
Katie Lynn Clemons, Washington State University
Gender and the Victimization-Offending Link from Adolescence through Adulthood
Joanne M. Kaufman, University at Albany, SUNY
No Female Subjects: A Content Analysis Exploring Women’s Representation in Criminological Research
Jason Burkett, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Gossett, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Research Gone ‘Female’: Exploring Female Representation in Criminological Research Samples
Joshua Hoffee, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Jennifer Gossett, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
A Qualitative Exploration of Media Constructions of Sexual Assault
Emma Lindsay McGeachy, University of Calgary
SESSION 474: ROUNDTABLE: SUBSTANCE ABUSE AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Drug Dealers in Depth
Anna Furmanskaya, Siena College
Arianna Antisin, Siena College
223
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Family Financial Stress and Adolescent Substance Use: An Examination of Structural and Psychosocial Factors
Melissa A. Menasco, Canisius College
Knowledge, Awareness, and Behavior: HIV/AIDS among Black Drug Users
Eloise Emma Dunlap, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.
Ellen Benoit, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.
Sexual Orientation and Substance Abuse: An Examination of the Causes and Consequences of Substance Abuse by Sexual Minorities
Charles Lanfear, Oregon State University
Scott Akins, Oregon State University
Clayton Mosher, Washington State University - Vancouver
SESSION 475: HISTORICAL AND CONTEMPORARY ISSUES IN IMMIGRATION AND CRIME
POLICY
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
David Carrothers, Culver-Stockton College
Expanding Criminalization: Exploring the Impact of Immigration Policy on Documented and Undocumented Latino Immigrants
Jorge M. Chavez, Bowling Green State University
Christine M. Englebrecht, Bowling Green State University
Anayeli Lopez, Goshen College
Ruben P. Viramontez Anguiano, Bowling Green State University
Facts and Figures: What Can We Learn from the 2010 Census Data?
Janice Anne Iwama, Northeastern University
From Criminalization to Symbolic Resiliency: Undocumented Immigrants “Re-Imagining Success” in the United States
Francisco J. Alatorre, New Mexico State University
Exploring the Immigration-Crime Nexus
David Carrothers, Culver-Stockton College
James L. Williams, Texas Woman's University
SESSION 476: FEMINIST THEORY AND PEDAGOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Cindy Stewart, College of Mount St. Joseph
A Call to Deep Learning: Reinvigorating Feminist Pedagogy in the Criminal Justice Classroom
Venezia Michalsen, Montclair State University
Cigdem Talgar, Montclair State University
A Recipe for a Drug Scare: Teaching the Social Construction of Deviance and Social Problems
Janine Ann Bower, Keuka College
Innovative University Programs for Teaching about Domestic Violence
Molly Dragiewicz, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Angela R. Gover, University of Colorado - Denver
Susan L. Miller, University of Delaware
Jennifer Naccarelli, University of Delaware
Barbara Paradiso, University of Colorado - Denver
SESSION 477: POLICE AND CRIME CONTROL
Thursday, November 15 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Charles F. Wellford, University of Maryland
General and Specific Deterrent Effects of Law Enforcement
Jennifer M. Brown, Florida State University
Bill Bales, Florida State University
224
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Long-Term Effects of Arrest: Results from the 20-Year Follow-Up of the Milwaukee Domestic Violence Experiment
Heather M. Harris, University of Maryland
Deterrent Effect of Police-Monitored CCTV on Crime: A Quasi-Experimental Test in Taipei, Taiwan
Chuen-Jim Sheu, National Taipei University
Yung-Lien Lai, Central Police University, Taiwan
Controlling Zero Tolerance Policing: Implementing Policy
Charles F. Wellford, University of Maryland
SOCIAL
SESSION 478: ICE CREAM SOCIAL (SPONSORED BY WILEY-BLACKWELL)
Thursday, November 15 - 1:30 pm to 2:45 pm
Exhibit Hall
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 479: REALIZING THE POTENTIAL OF TECHNOLOGY FOR POLICING: RESULTS
FROM A MULTI-SITE STUDY
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
A Multi-Site Study of the Social, Organizational, and Behavioral Aspects of Implementing Policing Technologies: Project Overview
and Survey Results
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
James J. Willis, George Mason University
Technology in Police Organizations: Lessons from Two Agencies
James J. Willis, George Mason University
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
Technology in Police Organizations: Lessons from Two Additional Agencies
Daniel Woods, Police Executive Research Forum
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
James J. Willis, George Mason University
The Impact of a Police Information Technology on Crime Hot Spots: A Randomized Controlled Trial
Julie Hibdon, George Mason University
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
Discussant:
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
SESSION 480: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: MEET THE EDITORS PART I - THE
PUBLISHING PROCESS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Brandon Behlendorf, University of Maryland
Discussants:
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
225
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
Michael Maxfield, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Eric Baumer, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 481: MEDIA AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mary Brewster, West Chester University
Racism, Crime and Collective Efficacy: Media Representation of an Urban Community
Leslie-Dawn Quick, Fayetteville State University
The Murder of Neda: The Use of the Murder of Neda Agha-Soltan as Advancement of Geopolitical Interests by the United States
Empire
Justin Turner, Eastern Kentucky University
The Strange Career of the Glow Stick: Rave Culture and Symbolic Criminalization in the War on Drugs
Allison McKim, Bard College
The Deviant World of Disney: A Quantitative Analysis of Theatrical, Animated Feature Films
Brooke Miller Gialopsos, College of Mount St. Joseph
Cheryl Lero Jonson, Northern Kentucky University
William A. Stadler, University of Missouri - Kansas City
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 482: CYBORGS AND AVATARS AND MONSTERS (OH MY!): CRIMINAL
CONVERSATIONS WITH FEMINIST SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY STUDIES
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chairs:
Kathryn Henne, Australian National University
Kathryn Henne, Australian National University
“Sure My Avatar’s Black…Blackface!” Using Black Feminist Criminology to Examine the Continuation of Default Masculinity and
Whiteness in Virtual Gaming Communities
Kishonna Leah Gray, Eastern Kentucky University
Diagnosis, Deviance, and Suspect Bodies: Insights from Sport’s Vampires and Their Hunters
Kathryn Henne, Australian National University
Freak Show: Foucauldian Monstrosity and State Surveillance of Sex Offenders in California
Emily I. Troshynski, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Jesse Weiner, University of California, Irvine
TRIBUTE SESSION
SESSION 483: JAMES Q. WILSON: A TRIBUTE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chair:
Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University
James Q. Wilson on How to Think about Crime
Brian Forst, American University
James Q. Wilson on Deterrence
Daniel Nagin, Carnegie Mellon University
226
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
James Q. Wilson on Policing and Experimentation
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
James Q. Wilson On Broken Windows
George Kelling, Rutgers University / Manhattan Institute
James Q. Wilson on Psychology and Developmental Criminology
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
James Q. Wilson on Punishment, Drugs, and Ideology
Mark Kleiman, University of California, Los Angeles
James Q. Wilson, The Colleague
Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie Mellon University
James Q. Wilson, The Person
Joan Petersilia, Stanford Law School
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 484: INTRAGENERATIONAL AND INTERGENERATIONAL ANTECEDENTS OF
DELINQUENCY AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Terence P. Thornberry, University of Maryland
The Intergenerational Impacts of Incarceration
Mauri Matsuda, University of Maryland, College Park
Terence P. Thornberry, University of Maryland
Theoretical Modeling of Delinquency in the Life Course
Klaus Boers, Universitaet Muenster Inst f Kriminalwissenschaften
Daniel Seddig, Universitaet Muenster Inst f Kriminalwissenschaften
Jost Reinecke, University of Bielefeld, Germany
Trajectories of Adolescent Delinquency: Development and Explanation
Daniel Seddig, Universitaet Muenster Inst f Kriminalwissenschaften
Jost Reinecke, University of Bielefeld, Germany
Klaus Boers, Universitaet Muenster Inst f Kriminalwissenschaften
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 485: EXAMINING THE DOSAGE RISK RELATIONSHIP
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kimberly Sperber, Talbert House
Treatment Dosage and Risk: An Extension and Refinement of the Appropriate Levels of Dosage by Risk Level
Matthew Makarios, University of Wisconsin - Parkside
Kimberly Sperber, Talbert House
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Treatment Dosage and Personality: Examining the Impact of Personality on the Dosage Recidivism Relationship
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Matthew Makarios, University of Wisconsin - Parkside
Kimberly Sperber, Talbert House
Examining the Dosage Recidivism Relationship in Female Offenders
Stephanie Spiegel, University of Cincinnati
Kimberly Sperber, Talbert House
227
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Frontloading Treatment Dosage and the Impact on Recidivism
Kimberly Sperber, Talbert House
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 486: MEDIA CONSTRUCTION OF GENDER AND RACE I
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stacey Nofziger, University of Akron
Breaking Molds or Reaffirming Stereotypes? Race, Gender, and Power Dynamics in Fictional Crime Dramas
Gayle Rhineberger-Dunn, University of Northern Iowa
Nicole E. Rader, Mississippi State University
Lauren M. Vasquez, Mississippi State University
The Criminalization of Black Women: An Intersectional Analysis
Tiffanie Gray, Indiana University Bloomington
Newsworthiness and the "Missing White Woman Syndrome": A Content Analysis
Danielle Cindy Slakoff, California State University, Long Beach
Hank Fradella, California State University, Long Beach
The Disney-ification of Gender, Race, and Crime: A Content Analysis of Princess Disney Movies
Erika Frenzel, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Shannon Womer Phaneuf, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Elizabeth Mansley, Mount Aloysius College
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 487: EXPLORING VARIATIONS OF CYBERCRIME VICTIMIZATION AND
OFFENDING
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
Gendered Online Security: Examining the Effect of Gender on the Link between Online Social Network Activity, Privacy, and
Interpersonal Victimization
Billy Henson, Shippensburg University
Brad Reyns, Weber State University
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Exploring the Relationship Between Self-Control, Social Learning and Cybercrime
George W. Burruss, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
Adam M. Bossler, Georgia Southern University
Examining the Predictors of Cyberbullying in a College Sample
Melissa Ricketts, Shippensburg University
Catherine Marcum, Appalachian State University
George Higgins, University of Louisville
Tina L. Freiburger, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Gangs Online: Group-Level Predictors of Internet Adoption
Richard K. Moule, Arizona State University
David C. Pyrooz, Sam Houston State University
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
228
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 488: THE ECOLOGY OF RACIAL/ETHNIC COMPOSITION, IMMIGRATION, AND
VIOLENCE: ASSESSING THE CONTINUITY AND CHANGES
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
Chair:
Patricia L. McCall, North Carolina State University
Prejudice and the New Latino Migration: The Geographic Locus of Anti-Latino Sentiment
Edward S. Shihadeh, Louisiana State University
Angela Caraway, Louisiana State University
Racial/Ethnic Composition and Violence: Size-of-Place Variations in Percent Black and Percent Latino Effects on Violence Rates
Ben Feldmeyer, University of Tennessee
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University
Immigration and the Changing Nature of Homicide in U.S. Cities
Graham Ousey, College of William and Mary
Charis Kubrin, University of California, Irvine
Connecting Racial Segregation and Hispanic Immigration in a City-Level Study of Race-Specific Violence Over Time
Karen F. Parker, University of Delaware
Richard Stansfield, University of Delaware
Discussant:
Matthew R. Lee, Louisiana State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 489: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: ALTERNATIVE METHODS TO OVERCOME
CHALLENGES IN RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED EXPERIMENTS (ORGANIZED BY THE
DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY)
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
Can Matching and Similar Adjustments Achieve the Experimental Benchmark?
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
Regression Discontinuity as a Tool for Criminal Justice Practitioners
Sarah Kuck Jalbert, Abt Associates Inc.
William Rhodes, Abt Associates Inc.
Respondent-Driven Sampling in Criminal Justice Randomized Controlled Trials
Alese Wooditch, George Mason University
Amy Murphy, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 490: SCHOOL DISCIPLINE AND THE SCHOOL-TO-PRISON PIPELINE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Paul J. Hirschfield, Rutgers University
229
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Policing Chicago Public Schools: A Gateway to the School-to-Prison Pipeline
Mariame Kaba, Project NIA
Imitating Authority: School Discipline, Security, and Bullying
Aaron Kupchik, University of Delaware
Katie A. Farina, University of Delaware
New York State’s Effort to Narrow the Pipeline: An Evaluation of Two School-Based Diversion Programs
Victoria Schall, University at Albany, SUNY
Jamie J. Fader, University at Albany, SUNY
Benjamin Stokes, University at Albany, SUNY
A Critical Assessment of Theory and Research on the “School to Prison Pipeline”
Paul J. Hirschfield, Rutgers University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 491: RECOGNIZING VIOLENCE AND VICTIMIZATION: CONTEXTS AND QUESTIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ruth Triplett, Old Dominion University
Defining LGBTQ Victimization: Acknowledging the Obvious and Recognizing the Subtle
Deeanna Button, University of Delaware
Perceptions of Neighborhood Problems and Reactions to Them: The Perceptions of Community Leaders and Residents
Randy Gainey, Old Dominion University
Ruth Triplett, Old Dominion University
Tancy Vandecar-Burdin, Old Dominion University
Definitions of Violence: The Line Between Use of Force and Violence?
Brian Payne, Georgia State University
Susannah Tapp, Georgia State University
Victoria Collins, Old Dominion University
Ruth Triplett, Old Dominion University
How Do Gender and Age Shape Definitions of a Situation as Violence?
Ruth Triplett, Old Dominion University
Victoria Collins, Old Dominion University
Brian Payne, Georgia State University
Susannah Tapp, Georgia State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 492: INTERIM OUTCOMES FROM A COMMUNITY-BASED PRISONER REENTRY
INITIATIVE: SAFER RETURN
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jocelyn Fontaine, The Urban Institute
Successes and Challenges in Efforts to Change the Reentry Landscape in Illinois: Lessons from the Safer Return Demonstration
Project
Steven McCullough, Safer Foundation
Rochelle Perry, Safer Foundation
The Impact of Comprehensive Community-Based Prisoner Reentry Services on Reincarceration Outcomes
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
Jocelyn Fontaine, The Urban Institute
Justin Breaux, The Urban Institute
230
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Importance of Family and Social Support Networks for Reentry Outcomes
Jocelyn Fontaine, The Urban Institute
Shelli Rossman, The Urban Institute
Megan Denver, Urban Institute
Community Context, Resident Perceptions, and Prisoner Reentry
Justin Breaux, The Urban Institute
Jocelyn Fontaine, The Urban Institute
Douglas Gilchrist-Scott, The Urban Institute
MEETING
SESSION 493: DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME MENTORING MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
SESSION 494: A DISCUSSION WITH THE DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF
JUSTICE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Thomas E. Feucht, National Institute of Justice
Discussants:
John H. Laub, National Institute of Justice
Ross Matsueda, University of Washington
Craig Hemmens, Missouri State University
SESSION 495: VICTIMIZATION PREVENTION STRATEGIES
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Audrey Clubb, Georgia State University
Preventing Child Abduction
Joseph O. Ugwu, Prairie View A&M University
G. Solomon Osho, Prairie View A&M University
Defending the Castle: How Individual and Neighborhood Factors Affect Guardianship of One's Home
Audrey Clubb, Georgia State University
SESSION 496: POLICE CRISIS INTERVENTION, MENTAL HEALTH, AND DRUGS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stuart Charles Lister, University of Leeds, UK
Characteristics of Police Crisis Intervention Cases
Jessica Hickey, College of Mount St. Joseph
Cindy Stewart, College of Mount St. Joseph
Policing Mental Health: A Qualitative Analysis of Police Records
Richard Frank, Simon Fraser University
Graham Farrell, Simon Fraser University
Jordana Kimberly Gallison, Simon Fraser University
Richard Bent, Simon Fraser University
Patricia Brantingham, Simon Fraser University
231
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Unsung Heroes or 'Pass the Buck': The Impact of Mental Health on Police Discretion
Jennifer L. Schulenberg, University of Waterloo
Street Policing of Problem Drug Users: Consequences and Contradictions for Community Safety
Stuart Charles Lister, University of Leeds, UK
SESSION 497: PROSECUTORIAL DECISION MAKING: PREDICTORS AND EFFECTS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Don Stemen, Loyola University Chicago
Police-Prosecutor Interaction Styles in Texas as Perceived by Police Chiefs
Brenda Inman Rowe, Sam Houston State University
The Centrality of Prosecutors to Prison Growth: An Empirical Assessment
John Pfaff, Fordham Law School
The Fiscal Impact of Changes to Eligibility for Conditional Sentences of Imprisonment in Canada
Tolga Yalkin, Parliamentary Budget Office, Canada
Michael Kirk, Parliamentary Budget Office
Variation in the Screening, Charging, and Plea Bargaining Strategies of Prosecutors
Don Stemen, Loyola University Chicago
SESSION 498: FIREARMS ACCESS, RESTRICTIONS, AND CAMPUSES
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Murat Gok, Turkish National Police
Armed and Dangerous: Would Armed Faculty Deter Violent Crime on a College Campus?
Greg Warchol, Northern Michigan University
Dale Kapla, Northern Michigan University
Criminal Justice Majors and Firearms on Campus
Dale Kapla, Northern Michigan University
Greg Warchol, Northern Michigan University
Exploring the Financial and Public Health Costs Associated with Gun Violence in Schools
Kirsten Hutzell, George Mason University
Ajima Olaghere, George Mason University
Catherine Gallagher, George Mason University
The Relationship between Handgun Restrictions and Crime
Murat Gok, Turkish National Police
SESSION 499: SERVING SPECIALIZED POPULATIONS IN THE COMMUNITY
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Martha Sherman, Baylor University
Assessing Positive Outcomes of Day Reporting Center Programming for Female Offenders: An Exploratory Study
Laura M. Ragusa-Salerno, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Douglas J. Boyle, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Andrea Marcus, The Violence Institute of New Jersey at UMDNJ
Barriers to Implementing Substance Abuse Treatment Services for Probationers: Views of Probation and Treatment Staff
Steven Belenko, Temple University
Traci Rieckmann, Oregon Health and Science University
Ingrid Diane Johnson, Temple University
Nancy Wolff, Rutgers University
232
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Forensic Assertive Community Treatment (FACT): A Corrections Alternative for Mentally Ill Offenders?
Jennifer Cermak, Marymount University
Karen Davis, Marymount University
Rehabilitating Different Types of Sex Offenders in Community-Based and Prison Settings
Joseph Meyer Levin, Old Dominion University
Mengyan Dai, Old Dominion University
SESSION 500: VIOLENCE AND THE POLICE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Colin Loftin, University at Albany, SUNY
Police Excessive Force in the Southwest: Ethnic, Ecological, and Organizational Predictors
Malcolm D. Holmes, University of Wyoming
Brad Smith, Wayne State University
Sex Differences in the Felonious Killings of Police Officers
Illya Lichtenberg, Mercy College
The Impact of Neighborhood Crimes on Police Use of Force: An Examination at Micro Levels
Hoon Lee, Western Carolina University
Michael S. Vaughn, Sam Houston State University
Hyeyoung Lim, Western Illinois University
The Relationship between Murders of Police and Justifiable Homicides by Police, 1980-2010
Colin Loftin, University at Albany, SUNY
David McDowall, University at Albany, SUNY
Robert J. Kaminski, University of South Carolina
SESSION 501: PRISONER REENTRY FOR WOMEN I
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Patricia O'Brien, University of Illinois at Chicago
College and Communities: Education and Reentry for Women
Sarah Elizabet Daly, Rutgers University - Newark
Todd Clear, Rutgers University - Newark
Factors Impacting Recidivism among Female Inmates
Shayna Maybrier, Eastern Kentucky University
David May, Mississippi State University
One Size Does Not Fit All: Post-Incarcerated Women Three Years Later
Maureen Norton-Hawk, Suffolk University
Out of Jail to the Community: Building Relationships between Mothers, Caregivers and Children for Success
Patricia O'Brien, University of Illinois at Chicago
Qiana Cryer-Coupet, University of Illinois at Chicago
SESSION 502: HELP-SEEKING AMONG VICTIMS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Desiree Wiesen-Martin, University of New Hampshire
Help Seeking among Victims of Hate Crime: A Review of the Empirical Literature
Derek Ryan Scheer, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Bitna Kim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Paul Hawkins, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Soo-Jung Byoun, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
233
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
How Can Women’s Self-Defense Courses Increase Recruitment of Participants?
Leanne Brecklin, University of Illinois Springfield
Domestic and Sexual Violence Help Seeking: Interaction of Individual Characteristics and Community and State Policies
Desiree Wiesen-Martin, University of New Hampshire
SESSION 503: SURVEILLANCE, SECURITY, AND CRIME PREVENTION
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephane Leman-Langlois, Laval University
Contradictions of Compliance: Privacy Impact Assessments and the City-Street Video Surveillance in Canada
Sean P. Hier, University of Victoria
Kevin Walby, University of Victoria
The Crime Prevention Effectiveness of CCTVs: Downtown Cincinnati
Chunghyeon Seo, University of Florida
Sang Jun Park, University of Cincinnati
Exploring the Construction of Security in the Canada-United States Perimeter Security Action Plan Consultations
Patrick C. Lalonde, University of Windsor
The Dialectics of Vigilance as Social Control
Kerrin-Sina Arfsten, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
SESSION 504: NEIGHBORHOOD NETWORKS AND OFFENDING NETWORKS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Andres F. Rengifo, Rutgers University
Neighborhood as Network or Network as Neighborhood? Placing Social Ties in Geographic Space
Meagan Cahill, The Urban Institute
Caterina Roman, Temple University
Racial Homophily in Social Networks and Informal Social Control
Barbara D. Warner, Georgia State University
Kristin Swartz, University of Louisville
Shila Rene' Hawk-Tourtelot, Georgia State University
Co-Offending within Ego Networks: Unpacking Homophily, Network Composition and Structure
Caterina Roman, Temple University
Patrick Mitchell Downey, The Urban Institute
Meagan Cahill, The Urban Institute
Network Characteristics and Offending Patterns of Chinese Drug Trafficking Groups
Spencer D. Li, University of Macau
Jianhong Liu, University of Macau
SESSION 505: HISTORICAL ANALYSES OF CRIME AND LEGAL CHANGE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robert Donald Weide, New York University
Colonialism, Culture and Nationalism: Honor Killings in the Judiciary of Mandate Palestine
Badi Hasisi, The Hebrew University
Deborah Bernstein, University of Haifa
Sex with Minors: An Australian Case Study, 1870-1930
Yorick Jan Frederick Smaal, Griffith University
234
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
The Artful Dodger or Convenient Scapegoat: Children, Youth, and Crime in 19th Century Britain
Caroline Gibson Akers, University of Cambridge
SESSION 506: THEORETICAL ADVANCES IN THE CROSS-NATIONAL CONTEXT
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Oliver Kaplan, San Diego State University
Crime and Complementary Governance in the Andean Region
Annette Idler, St. Antony's College, University of Oxford
James J.F. Forest, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Therapeutic Jurisprudence in the Civil Commitment Context: A Cross-Cultural Perspective
Rebecca Oliver Kaplan, San Diego State University
SESSION 507: GENERAL STRAIN THEORY
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephen Watts, University of Georgia
A Test of General Strain Theory among Military Women and Men
Kellie Van Dyke, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Natalie D. Klemann, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Rohald Ardwan Meneses, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Agnew's General Strain Theory: Perceptions of Life Priorities and Non-Criminal Reactions to Strain
Shannon Gibson, Florida State University
Foster Youth and Crime: Employing General Strain Theory to Promote Understanding
Ravinder Barn, Royal Holloway, University of London
Jo-Pei Tan, Royal Holloway, University of London
Childhood Abuse and Later Criminal Behavior: Testing a General Strain Theory Model
Stephen Watts, University of Georgia
SESSION 508: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND SOCIAL STIGMA: EFFECTS ON THE LIVES OF SEXUAL
OFFENDERS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Venessa Garcia, Kean University
Beyond Recidivism: How Does Social Support Impact the Success or Failure of Sex Offenders?
Kimberly R. Kras, University of Missouri - St. Louis
In Her Own Words: A Qualitative Examination of Female Sex Offenders
Jennifer Klein, University of Florida
Methods of Exposure: The Reality of Prison Living for Sex Offenders
Mackenzie Moir, York University
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
The Inside World of Incarcerated Sex Offenders in Rehabilitation
Brenda Geiger, Western Galilee College
SESSION 509: CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON CRIME OVER THE LIFE COURSE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Sue Katz, Morehead State University
235
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Gendered Pathways: A Theoretical Influenced Investigation of Juvenile Females' Paths to Delinquency
Doshie Piper, Prairie View A&M University
Psychosocial Perspectives of Girls and Violence: Implications for Policy and Praxis
Robin A Robinson, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Judith A. Ryder, St. John's University
“Staff Here Let You Get Down”: The Cultivation and Cooptation of Violence in a California Juvenile Detention Center
Jerry Flores, University of California, Santa Barbara
The Impact of the School-To-Prison Pipeline on Young Females of Color
Sanna King, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Raced and Gendered Identity: Humanistic Crime and Social Altruism
Rebecca Sue Katz, Morehead State University
Hannah Willis, Morehead State University
SESSION 510: LEGAL EQUITY AND CORRUPTION ACROSS NATIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Shahid M. Shahidullah, Elizabeth City State University
Criminalization of Politics and Politicization of Crime in the Philippines and United States
Christopher Magno, Gannon University
Exploring Effects of Corruption and Inequality on Crime and Social Unrest during China’s Economic Transition
Xiaogang Deng, University of Massachusetts Boston
Yiping Wu, Zhejiang University of Finance and Economics, China
Social Capital and Corruption: An Examination into the Intervening Role of Rule of Law
Riccardo Ferraresso, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Bryce Elling Peterson, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Daiwon Lee, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Crime Rate, Rule of Law, and Democracy: A Comparative Study of the Failed States
Shahid M. Shahidullah, Elizabeth City State University
Shyamal Das, Elizabeth City State University
SESSION 511: EXPLORATIONS OF QUALITATIVE METHODS IN CRIMINOLOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
Asking Simple Questions, Getting Rich Data: Some Thoughts on Qualitative Interviewing
Patricia Preston Dahl, Washburn University
Immersion in Metro Manila Slums: Challenges and Prospects of Collecting Data on Crime and Violence in Non-Western Settings
Raymund E. Narag, Southern Illinois University
Sheila Royo Maxwell, Michigan State University
Meaning Making in Criminology: Demystifying Semiotics as a Methodological Tool
Victor E. Kappeler, Eastern Kentucky University
Peter Brandon Kraska, Eastern Kentucky University
Qualitative Fieldwork Contributions to Experimental Design and Implementation Science in Criminal Justice Settings
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
SESSION 512: FIREARMS ACQUISITION, MOBILITY, AND MARKETS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Carlo Morselli, Université de Montréal
236
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
“Get ‘em While You Still Can”: Structural and Cultural Motivations for Firearm Attainment
Trent Steidley, Ohio State University
Martin Kosla, Ohio State University
Criminal and Adverse Events during the Conduct of Retail Commerce in Firearms: Findings from the Firearms Licensee Survey
Garen J. Wintemute, University of California, Davis
The Mobility of Crime Guns
Carlo Morselli, Université de Montréal
Dominik Blais, Université de Montréal
SESSION 513: DRUGS, CRIME, AND PUBLIC POLICY
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sara Steen, University of Colorado - Boulder
A Survival Analysis of Offenders Sentenced to Continuous Alcohol Monitoring with SCRAM
Greg Midgette, RAND Corporation
Paul Heaton, RAND Corporation
Beau Kilmer, RAND Corporation
Nancy Nicosia, RAND Corporation
An Offender Mental Model of the Drug Market Intervention
Alexis Norris, Michigan State University
Estimating the Effect of an Open-Air Drug Market Intervention
Jessica Saunders, RAND Corporation
Drug Law Reform in Colorado
Sara Steen, University of Colorado - Boulder
Anjali Nandi, University of Colorado - Boulder
SESSION 514: POLICING FULL CIRCLE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michele Muni, Rutgers University
Predictors of Stress and Conflict Style in the Close Relationships of Police Officers
Salih Hakan Can, Pennsylvania State University
The Impact of In-Car Cameras on Excessive Use of Force by Police
Nusret Sahin, Rutgers University
Policing Domestic Violence: A Case Study of Innovation in the Trenton Police Department
Michele Muni, Rutgers University
SESSION 515: ROUNDTABLE: RACE, ETHNICITY, AND CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Black Political and Socioeconomic Status Attainment and the Direction of Lethal Violence: Comparing the Suicide of Young Black and
White Males in U.S. Counties
Kimya N. Dennis, Salem College
Immigration and Individual-Level Crime: Assessing Micro-Level Processes Associated with the Immigrant-Crime Link
Allen W. Wong, University at Albany, SUNY
Understanding the Most At-Risk for Incarceration: Black Males with Disabilities, from the Schoolhouse to the Jailhouse
Amir Whitaker, University of Miami
Vanessa Ann Thorrington, University of Miami
237
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 516: ROUNDTABLE: TEACHING CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY: FOSTERING CRITICAL
THINKING
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Teaching Critical Thinking Skills
Michael J. Coyle, California State University, Chico
“You Don’t Have to Agree to Understand”: Creating an Open Classroom Environment Conducive to Critical Inquiry
Rebecca Hayes, Central Michigan University
Developing Critical Thinking: Using Memo Work with Current News Items
Matthew G. Yeager, King's University College, Western University Canada
Engaged Pedagogy: Teaching Through Action Research Teams
Luis A. Fernandez, Northern Arizona University
SESSION 517: ROUNDTABLE: RESEARCH ON POLICE USE OF PEDESTRIAN STOPS AND
SEARCHES
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Jack Greene, Northeastern University
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
David Weisburd, George Mason University / Hebrew University
Pamela Lachman, The Urban Institute
Nancy La Vigne, The Urban Institute
SESSION 518: ROUNDTABLE: STUDYING MASS-MEDIATED CRIME AND TERRORISM: THE
DEVELOPMENT OF A SHARED, COLLABORATIVE APPROACH
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
David Green, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Discussants:
Steven Chermak, Michigan State University
Nicole Hanson, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Jeff Gruenewald, University of Arkansas
William Parkin, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Tarra Jackson, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
SESSION 519: RACE AND JUVENILE JUSTICE
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Erin Wolbeck, University of California, Riverside
Racialized Gangs: Colorblindness, Risk, and Social Control
Marisa Omori, University of California, Irvine
Luis Daniel Gascón, University of California, Irvine
Jacob Kang-Brown, University of California, Irvine
Darin Haerle, University of California, Irvine
Balancing, Grouping, and Efforts to Manage Youth: Analyzing Race and Gangs in Juvenile Correctional Facilities
Jacob Kang-Brown, University of California, Irvine
Darin Haerle, University of California, Irvine
Marisa Omori, University of California, Irvine
Luis Daniel Gascón, University of California, Irvine
Disproportionate Minority Contact (DMC) among Nebraska’s Detained Youth
Anne Hobbs, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Timbre L. Wulf-Ludden, University of Nebraska at Omaha
238
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Can You Hear Me Now? Strategies for Collecting and Analyzing DMC Data in States with Data Systems that Do Not Communicate
Crystal A. Garcia, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
G. Roger Jarjoura, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Konrad A Haight, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Jaime Sherls, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Justin Roof, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
SESSION 520: INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH ON DRUG USE, DEALING, AND CONTROL I
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Do-It-Yourself: Examining Medical Marijuana Users Who Grow Their Own
Nicholas Athey, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Neil Boyd, Simon Fraser University
Narratives of Change in Drug and Alcohol Misuse
Zetta Kougiali, University of Portsmouth / The Nehemiah Project, HMP Kingston
Insite as Representation and Regulation: A Discursively-Informed Analysis of Canada's First Safe Injection Site
Alicia Alexandra Sanderson, University of Ottawa / Wilfred Laurier University (Alumna)
Victimization and Social Control in Amsterdam Cafés and Coffeeshops
Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Scott Jacques, Georgia State University
Richard Wright, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Danielle M. Reynald, Griffith University
Frank van Gemert, VU University Amsterdam
SESSION 521: THE MEANING AND CONSTRUCTION OF CRIMINAL NETWORKS
Thursday, November 15 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Meredith Conover-Williams, Washington State University - Vancouver
Criminal Mentors in Prisoners’ Personal Networks: Who are they? And Where are They Positioned?
Ruben De Cuyper, The Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement (NSCR)
Anja Dirkzwager, NSCR
Peter H. van der Laan, NSCR / VU University Amsterdam
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Beate Volker, Utrecht University
Residential Proximity to Peers and Adolescent Friendship Networks
Dana L. Haynie, Ohio State University
Brian Soller, Ohio State University
Christopher R. Browning, Ohio State University
An Analysis of the Community Education Centers' Alumni Association
Ralph Fretz, Community Education Centers
Michael Ostermann, Rutgers University
More of the Same? Trends in Homophily among Co-Offenders, 1980-2007
Meredith Conover-Williams, Washington State University - Vancouver
Katie Lynn Clemons, Washington State University
Jennifer Schwartz, Washington State University
239
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 522: CRIME COSTS AND VICTIM HARM: USING VICTIMIZATION DATA TO STUDY
THE CONSEQUENCES OF CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Lynn A. Addington, American University
The Costs of Crime Revisited
Lynn Langton, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Michael Planty, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Less Crime, More Harm? Comparing Crime Rates with a Harm Index
Michael Planty, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Lynn A. Addington, American University
Why Getting Estimates of the Harms to Crime Victims Right Matters and How to Do It
John Roman, The Urban Institute
Discussant:
William J. Sabol, Bureau of Justice Statistics
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 523: MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE: NEW CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND LEGAL
PERSPECTIVES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robert J. Norris, University at Albany, SUNY
Mass Exonerations
Samuel R. Gross, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
The Utility of Criminal Justice Theory for Studying Wrongful Convictions
Catherine L. Bonventre, University at Albany, SUNY
Robert J. Norris, University at Albany, SUNY
Innocence Found: The Rise of the Innocence Movement in America
Keith Findley, University of Wisconsin
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 524: WHEN VIOLENCE TURNS DEADLY: CORRELATES OF HOMICIDE IN EUROPE
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Nora Markwalder, University of Zurich
Knives and Alcohol: A Deadly Combination for Russians in Estonia
Jako Salla, Estonian Ministry of Justice
The Influence of Event Characteristics and Behavior of Actors Involved in Lethal vs. Non-Lethal Violent Events
Soenita Ganpat, Leiden University
Joanne Van der Leun, Leiden University
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Homicide and Firearms: The European Perspective
Nora Markwalder, University of Zurich
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
240
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 525: MEDIA CONSTRUCTION OF GENDER AND RACE II
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Aileen O'Gorman, University College Dublin
Gendered Representations of Parents Behind Bars: An Analysis of Newspaper Reports
Janani Umamaheswar, Pennsylvania State University
Peddling Danger, Despair, and Redemption: The Materiality of Prison Memoirs
Rebecca L. Bordt, DePauw University
Reporting Femicide-Suicide in the News: The Implementation of Suicide Reporting Guidelines and Recommendations for the Future
Lane Kirkland Gillespie, University of South Florida
Tara N. Richards, Appalachian State University
Eugena A. Givens, University of South Florida
Racial Profiling in the News: Accurate Portrayal or Perpetuation of Myth?
Carol A. Archbold, North Dakota State University
Thorvald Dahle, North Dakota State University
Melinda Fangman, North Dakota State University
Ericka Ann Wentz, North Dakota State University
Mckenzie Wood, North Dakota State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 526: OPERATIONAL CONCERNS IN COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS: OFFENDER
REHABILITATION, CASE MANAGEMENT, AND RISK ASSESSMENT
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Effect of Treatment Readiness for Reentrants with History of Substance Abuse
Stefanie R. McDonald, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency
Effect of Exogenous Supervision Officer Reassignment on Supervision Outcomes
Carroll Ganier, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency
Zero-Day Risk Assessment in Community Corrections
Mark Coggeshall, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency
Carroll Ganier, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency
Discussant:
Calvin Johnson, Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 527: TEENS, SEX, AND TECH: HIGHLIGHTS FROM A MULTI-STATE, OJJDP-FUNDED
STUDY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Karen JoAnne Bachar, U.S. Department of Justice - OJJDP
Understanding Teen “Sexting” in a Participatory Framework
Andrew J. Harris, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Living in Different Worlds? Comparing Youth and Parent Perspectives on Teen “Sexting”
Karin Tusinski Miofsky, University of Hartford
241
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Teen Sexting: Educator Perspectives and Challenges
Judith Davidson, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Andrew J. Harris, University of Massachusetts Lowell
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 528: REVIEWING STRATEGIC INITIATIVES TO REDUCE GANG VIOLENCE:
PROMISING CROSS-NATIONAL APPROACHES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
Opening the Focused Deterrence Black Box: Further Examination of the Cincinnati Initiative to Reduce Violence
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
Marie Skubak Tillyer, University of Texas at San Antonio
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Nicholas Corsaro, University of Cincinnati
"Pulling Levers" in Scotland to Tackle Gangs and Violent Crime: A Comparative Analysis of International Criminal Justice Policy
Transfer
William Graham, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
Policing Gang Violence in Cincinnati and Glasgow: One with a Gun, One with a Jacket and One with some Tales and Confessions
Ross Deuchar, University of the West of Scotland
Deterring Gun Homicide: Testing the Impact of Project Safe Neighborhoods
Edmund McGarrell, Michigan State University
Nicholas Corsaro, University of Cincinnati
Discussant:
David M. Kennedy, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 529: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: EVALUATING POLICE LEGITIMACY AND
PROCEDURAL JUSTICE (ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL
CRIMINOLOGY)
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
Legitimacy in Policing: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
Jacqueline Davis, University of Queensland
Shaping Citizen Perceptions of Police Legitimacy: A Randomized Field Trial of Procedural Justice
Emma Antrobus, University of Queensland
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
Tom Tyler, Yale University
Improving Perceptions of Police in Youth and Ethnic Minorities: Findings from a Randomized Field Trial of Procedural Justice-Based
Policing
Kristina Murphy, Griffith University
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
Emma Antrobus, University of Queensland
242
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 530: ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR THROUGHOUT THE LIFESPAN: FACTORS
PREDICTING REPEATED INVOLVEMENT IN CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Official Bias, Labeling and Intergenerational Transmission
Sytske Besemer, University of Cambridge, UK
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Catrien Bijleveld, NSCR
Are Levels of Empathy Predictive of Later Reoffending?
Darrick Jolliffe, University of Leicester
Paul Turnbull, Birkbeck College, University of London
Tim McSweeney, Birkbeck College, University of London
Childhood, Personality and Clinical Predictors of Recidivism for 528 Canadian Offenders
Christopher John Koegl, Ontario Correctional Institute
The Stability of Antisocial Personality over Time
Tara Renae McGee, Griffith University
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 531: TESTING SITUATIONAL ACTION THEORY: MORALITY AND MORAL NORMS
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ralph Taylor, Temple University
Situational Peer Effects on Adolescents' Alcohol Consumption
Harald Beier, University of Mannheim
Religion, Peers, and Crime: Exploring Peer Religiosity and its Role in the Relationship between Religion, Morality, and Crime
Jane Horgan, University of Cambridge
Interactions between Morality and Situational Factors in the Genesis of Adolescent Crime - and How (Not) to Find Them in
Regression Analysis
Dietrich Oberwittler, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Dominik Gerstner, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Toward a Multilevel Theory of Morality and Crime: An Empirical Assessment of Prospects for Integrating SAT and IAT
Olena Antonaccio, University of Miami
Ekaterina Botchkovar, Northeastern University
Lorine Hughes, University of Nebraska at Omaha
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 532: DISENGAGEMENT FROM ILLICIT GROUPS
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Tore Bjorgo, Norwegian Police University College
Reintegration of Ex-Pirates in Somalia: Engagement and Disengagement Processes and Community Involvement
Tore Bjorgo, Norwegian Police University College
Ingvild M. Gjelsvik, Norwegian Police University College
243
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Disengagement and De-Radicalization from Terrorist Organizations: Empirical Research from an Ongoing Investigation
John G. Horgan, Pennsylvania State University
Mary Beth Altier, Pennsylvania State University
Christian Thoroughgood, Pennsylvania State University
Emma Leonard, Pennsylvania State University
Gang Desistance as Role Transitions
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
David C. Pyrooz, Sam Houston State University
Richard K. Moule, Arizona State University
Discussant:
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 533: MOVING BEYOND “DO DRUG COURTS WORK”: RESULTS FROM STATEWIDE
EVALUATIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David B. Wilson, George Mason University
Determining the Ideal Target Population: Results from a Statewide Evaluation in New York
Michael Rempel, Center for Court Innovation
Why Do Drug Courts Work? A Multi-Level Test of Drug Court Policies and Practices
Amanda Cissner, Center for Court Innovation
Best Practices in Drug Courts as Related to Outcomes: Results from an Analysis of Data from 67 Drug Courts Across the United
States
Michael Finigan, NPC Research
Discussant:
David B. Wilson, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 534: STATE MEDICAL MARIJUANA POLICIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH OUTCOMES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Eric L. Sevigny, University of South Carolina
Medical Marijuana and Recreational Marijuana Use: What Does and Does Not Matter?
Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, RAND Corporation
David Powell, RAND Corporation
Does Pot Kill? Marijuana Access and Fatal Accidents
Paul Heaton, RAND Corporation
The Effects of State Medical Marijuana Policies on Cannabis Potency and Quality: Evidence from Seized Samples
Eric L. Sevigny, University of South Carolina
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 535: DEVELOPMENTAL PATHWAYS TO FAMILY VIOLENCE
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Timothy O. Ireland, Niagara University
244
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Developmental Risk Factors for Intimate Partner Violence
Carolyn A. Smith, University at Albany, SUNY
Sarah J. Greenman, University of Maryland
Identifying Risk Factors for the Perpetration of Child Maltreatment
Terence P. Thornberry, University of Maryland
Megan Bears Augustyn, University of Maryland
Mauri Matsuda, University of Maryland, College Park
The Impact of Adolescent Gang Membership on Involvement in Intimate Partner Violence during Adulthood
Sarah J. Greenman, University of Maryland
Timothy O. Ireland, Niagara University
Pathways for Continuity: Family Violence Exposure and Subsequent Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence Using Item Response
Theory
Timothy O. Ireland, Niagara University
Kimberly L. Henry, Colorado State University
MEETING
SESSION 536: AFRICAN CRIMINOLOGY AND JUSTICE ASSOCIATION MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 537: WAR CRIMES, GENOCIDE & CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY: AN
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 1, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 538: KOREAN SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY IN AMERICA (KSCA) MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 539: DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME FEMINIST CRIMINOLOGY EDITORIAL
BOARD MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 540: JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN CRIME & DELINQUENCY BOARD MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
MEETING
SESSION 541: DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY EXECUTIVE MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:20 pm
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
245
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 542: CORRUPTION AND ORGANIZED CRIME IN EUROPE (ORGANIZED BY THE
INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF ORGANIZED CRIME)
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Authors
Philip Gounev, Center for the Study of Democracy
Vincenzo Ruggiero, Middlesex University
Critics
James Finckenauer, Rutgers University
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Discussant:
Klaus von Lampe, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 543: THE BETTER ANGELS OF OUR NATURE: WHY VIOLENCE HAS DECLINED
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Author
Steven Pinker, Harvard University
Critics
Randolph Roth, Ohio State University
Manuel Peter Eisner, University of Cambridge
Gary LaFree, University of Maryland
SESSION 544: POLICE USE OF DEADLY FORCE
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
David A. Klinger, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Active Shooter Events 2000-2010: Implications for Police
J. Pete Blair, Texas State University
M. Hunter Martaindale, Texas State University
Firearm Use at Fugitive Apprehension
Sarah Welchans Craun, United States Marshals Service
Paul J. Detar, United States Marshals Service
David M. Bierie, United States Marshals Service
Student Responses to Deadly Force Choices under the Law
George Coroian, Pennsylvania State University, Wilkes-Barre
If They Knew Then What They Know Now: Police Officers’ Suggestions for Improving Deadly Force Training
Jordan C. Pickering, University of Missouri - St. Louis
David A. Klinger, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 545: INNOVATIONS IN ANALYZING CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Matthew Pate, University at Albany, SUNY
Integrating Geospatial Visual Analytics with a Criminal Justice Decision Support System
Luc E. Anselin, Arizona State University
Serge Rey, Arizona State University
Robert Pahle, Arizona State University
Julia Koschinsky, Arizona State University
246
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Agent-Based Computational Modeling and Its Potential in Developing, Integrating and Revising Criminology Theories Incorporating
Interdisciplinary Evidence
Mengsen Zhang, University of Pennsylvania
Understanding the Resilience of a Ndrangheta Drug-Trafficking Group
Giulia Berlusconi, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
The Case for Mixed Methods Research in Criminology: Philosophy, Design, and Utility
Lisa Holland-Davis, Clayton State University
Jason Davis, Clayton State University
SESSION 546: CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY: REVISITING THE PAST AND THINKING ABOUT
THE FUTURE
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sanjay Marwah, Guilford College
The Jack-Roller Chronicle: The History of a Life-History
Jon Snodgrass, California State University, Los Angeles
From Footnote to Forgotten: Whatever Happened to Walter Miller?
Francis Frederick Hawley, Western Carolina University
A Theory of Theoretical Criminology
Richard Jones, University of Edinburgh
Reorienting Criminological Theories: Levels of Analysis, Contexts, and Mechanisms
Sanjay Marwah, Guilford College
Abul Yasir Azam, Guilford College
David G. Jenkins, Guilford College
SESSION 547: SOCIAL SUPPORT AND PRISONER REENTRY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Caitlin J. Taylor, La Salle University
Different Types of Family Support and Recidivism: Findings from the SVORI Evaluation
Caitlin J. Taylor, La Salle University
Perceptions of Family Support among Released Male Felons in the State of Texas
Jurg Gerber, Sam Houston State University
Gaylene Armstrong, Sam Houston State University
Meredith M. Davis, Sam Houston State University
The Process of Transition into the Community and Influence of Social Support Networks
Eric Grommon, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Jason Rydberg, Michigan State University
Timothy Bynum, Michigan State University
Social Support and Female Prisoner Reentry: A Confirmatory Factor Analysis
Seana Golder, University of Louisville
George Higgins, University of Louisville
T.K. Logan, University of Kentucky
Martin Hall, University of Louisville
SESSION 548: MECHANISMS UNDERLYING VIOLENCE AND VICTIMIZATION
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Chris Melde, Michigan State University
247
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Linking Verbal Deficits with Violent Victimization Risk
Chris Schreck, Rochester Institute of Technology
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Eric Stewart, Florida State University
Victimization and Decisions about Violence
Margit Averdijk, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich (ETH)
Manuel Peter Eisner, University of Cambridge
Denis Ribeaud, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Control Balance Theory as a Predictor of Delinquency and Victimization at Two Early Stages in the Life Course
Carlton W. Mathis, Texas A&M University
Tony P. Love, University of Texas at Arlington
Striking a Balance: A Prospective Examination of the Cognitive-Emotional Elements of Violence Reduction
Chris Melde, Michigan State University
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
SESSION 549: INFLUENCES ON INCARCERATION RATES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Thomas M. Arvanites, Villanova University
Analyzing Instrumental and Extrajudicial Explanations of Imprisonment on the State-Level, 1980-2005
Pavel V. Vasiliev, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
The Effects of Local Labor Market Opportunities and Social Welfare Provisions on Sex-Disaggregated Prison Admissions
Samantha R. Cumley, University of Idaho
What Goes Up Must Come Down? Exploring State-Level Declines in Incarceration
Elizabeth K. Brown, Niagara University
White Isolation and Black Drug Imprisonment Rates
Thomas M. Arvanites, Villanova University
Lance E. Hannon, Villanova University
SESSION 550: VICTIM CONTACT WITH THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Deborah J. Brydon, Mount Mercy University
Criminal Justice, Victim Support Centers, and the Emotional Well-Being of Crime Victims
Alline Pedra Jorge Birol, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil
Findings from the Evaluation of Statewide Automated Victim Information and Notification (SAVIN) Programs
Seri Irazola, ICF International
Sara Ann Debus-Sherrill, ICF International
Emily Niedzwiecki, ICF International
Erin Williamson, ICF International
The Effects of Restraint on the Restrainer and the Restrained
Jessica Bullock, North Carolina Central University
Lorna Elaine Grant, North Carolina Central University
Criminal Court Continuances and the Effect on Victims
Deborah J. Brydon, Mount Mercy University
248
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 551: ISSUES RELATED TO PRISON CONSTRUCTION
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brittany Groot, University of Northern Colorado
Building Green? Carceral Keynesian and Environmental Discourses in Canadian Prison Construction Marketing
Justin Piche, University of Ottawa
Carcerality in the Commonwealth: Representations and Contestations of Mass Incarceration in Kentucky
Conrad Lanham, Eastern Kentucky University
Judah Nathan Schept, Eastern Kentucky University
Combating NIMBY: Examining Prisons’ Effects on Local Crime Rates
Brittany Groot, University of Northern Colorado
SESSION 552: BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY: PSYCHOLOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gabriel Anderson, Louisiana State University
Depression and Delinquency: The Moderating Roles of Peer Delinquency and Social Bonds
Jason Ford, University of Central Florida
Do Intelligence and Academic Achievement Have a Special Relationship With Violence? A Systematic Review of the Literature
Joanne Savage, American University
Evolutionary Psychology and Crime: A New Paradigm in Theoretical Criminology?
Gabriel Anderson, Louisiana State University
Facial Emotion Processing in Psychopathy: Putting the Deficit Assumption to the Test
Pedro R. Almeida, University of Porto, Portugal
Fernando Ferreira-Santos, University of Porto, Portugal
João Marques-Teixeira, University of Porto, Portugal
SESSION 553: RACE, NEIGHBORHOOD STIGMA, AND PERCEPTIONS OF DISORDER
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Andrea Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston
Changing Neighborhood Contexts and Their Impact on Resident Perceptions of Crime and Disorder
Renee Zahnow, University of Queensland
Rebecca Wickes, University of Queensland
Michele Haynes, University of Queensland
The Stigmatizing and Criminalization of Hispanics and Hispanic Neighborhoods through Individuals' Disorder Perceptions
Andrea R. Borrego, Arizona State University
Danielle Wallace, Arizona State University
Nancy Rodriguez, Arizona State University
Brooks Louton, Arizona State University
Group Position and Crime Narratives: The Influence of Community, Local, and State Narratives
Andrea Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston
SESSION 554: CAPITAL PUNISHMENT IN THE UNITED STATES: TRENDS AND IMPLICATIONS
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Meredith Martin Rountree, University of Texas at Austin / American Bar Foundation
Capital Punishment Revisited: Comparing Trends in Legal and Extra-Legal Executions across U.S. History
Emily Reeder, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Terry Miethe, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
249
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Capital Punishment in America: Race, Geography, Crime, and Social Justice
Martin Guevara Urbina, Rio Grande College of Sul Ross State University
Ferris Roger Byxbe, Rio Grande College of Sul Ross State University
Capital Punishment in the United States: A Time-Series Analysis of Executions from 1930-2000
Ethan Amidon, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Is Hastening Execution a Form of Prison Suicide?
Meredith Martin Rountree, University of Texas at Austin / American Bar Foundation
SESSION 555: PERCEPTIONS OF POLICE LEGITIMACY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jacinta M. Gau, University of Central Florida
Consent Search Requests as a Threat to Police Legitimacy among Minority Motorists
Jacinta M. Gau, University of Central Florida
Rod K. Brunson, Rutgers University
Faith in the Police and Subcultural Violence: An Examination of Adopting the Code of the Street
Jonathan Intravia, Florida State University
Kevin Tyler Wolff, Florida State University
Refugees' Perceptions of the Police in Western New York
Joselyne L. Chenane, Buffalo State College
John Song, Buffalo State College
Jawjeong Wu, Buffalo State College
Rural Residents’ Attitudes toward the Police in China
Yuning Wu, Wayne State University
Rong Hu, Xiamen University
Ivan Sun, University of Delaware
SESSION 556: THE SOCIAL CONSTRUCTION OF JUVENILE CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Maldine B. Bailey, University of North Florida
The Race to Punish in American Schools: Race, Class, and Punitive School Crime Control
Katherine Irwin, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Janet Davidson, Chaminade University
Amanda Sanchez-Hall, University of Hawaii at Manoa
The Representation of Juvenile Sex Offenders in the Media: A Content Analysis of News Coverage
Chunrye Kim, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Judicial Waiver Laws: A Social Problem within a Social Problem
Matt Richie, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
Juveniles in the Adult Criminal Justice System: How Young is too Young?
Maldine B. Bailey, University of North Florida
SESSION 557: INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT AND CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY EVALUATION
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Josefina Maria Castro, University of Porto, Portugal
Applying an Integrated Model to Group Differences in Delinquency among Chinese Adolescents
Wan-Ning Bao, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Ain Haas, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
250
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Cyber-Deviant Behaviors in the Korean Youth Sample
Moonki Hong, Florida State University
Factors Related to Re-offending among Chinese Mass Murders and Serial Murders
Melody Yan Ma, University of Macau
Spencer D. Li, University of Macau
Minor and Serious Offending among American and Bolivian University Students: A Test of Social Learning Theory
Rohald Ardwan Meneses, University of North Carolina at Pembroke
Ronald Akers, University of Florida
Juvenile Delinquency: A Crosstalk between Individual and Contextual Factors
Josefina Maria Castro, University of Porto, Portugal
Carla Sofia Cardoso, University of Porto
Cândido da Agra, University of Porto, Portugal
SESSION 558: HOMICIDE: LATEST TRENDS AND EMERGING THEMES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Barbara D. Warner, Georgia State University
Trends in Homicide and Violence: Past, Current, and Future Considerations
John Jarvis, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Wendy Regoeczi, Cleveland State University
Establishing the Victim-Offender Relationship of Initially Unsolved Homicides after Clearance: Stranger, Acquaintance or Domestic?
Kenna Quinet, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Sam Nunn, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Matt Nagle, Indiana University
Female Juvenile Homicide Offenders: Portraits of Younger Children and Teenagers Who Kill
Kathleen M. Heide, University of South Florida
Brian G. Sellers, University of South Florida
Casey Williams, Osceola County Courthouse
SESSION 559: NEUTRALIZATIONS AND WHITE-COLLAR CRIME
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lynne Vieraitis, University of Texas at Dallas
Neutralization of Police Corruption
Mark Lauchs, Queensland University of Technology
When Hidden Behavior Becomes Public: A Content Analysis of Blogs Written by Food Service Employees
Katie Pantaleo, Lock Haven University
Do Women and Men Differ in their Neutralizations of Corporate Crime?
Lynne Vieraitis, University of Texas at Dallas
Nicole Leeper Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Alex Piquero, University of Texas at Dallas
Steven Tibbetts, California State University, San Bernardino
SESSION 560: YOUNG DRUG USERS I
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Steven Michael Lemmey, Florida State University
A Lifestyles Theoretical Perspective on Patterns of Substance Use and Offending Profiles of Juvenile Offenders
Raymond R. Corrado, Simon Fraser University
Evan Clark McCuish, Simon Fraser University
251
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Ice, Ice Babies: An Examination of Methamphetamine Use among Youth
Dana Radatz, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Abby L. Vandenberg, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Prescription Drugs: Generation Rx in Crisis
Ferris Roger Byxbe, Rio Grande College of Sul Ross State University
Martin Guevara Urbina, Rio Grande College of Sul Ross State University
Illicit Drug Use among High School Seniors in the United States from 1976 to 2009: An Analysis of the Utility of Competing
Criminological Paradigms
Steven Michael Lemmey, Florida State University
Chiung-Fang Hsu, Florida State University
SESSION 561: JUVENILE JUSTICE PRACTICES ACROSS NATION-STATES
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
David May, Mississippi State University
A Comparative Study of Juvenile Justice Systems in England, Japan, South Korea, and the United States: Trends, Changes, and
Challenges
Maisha Nichole Cooper, University of Central Missouri
Yeok-il Cho, University of Central Missouri
The Exploitation of Third World Child Slave Labor in the Quest for Disney’s Princess Identity
Alyson Kershaw, Eastern Kentucky University
What is a Child? Cross-National Comparisons of the Age of Responsibility
David May, Mississippi State University
Angie L. Wheaton, Eastern Kentucky University
Chuck Fields, Eastern Kentucky University
SESSION 562: MENTAL DISORDER AND THE JUSTICE SYSTEM
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matt Draper, Utah Valley University
An Autopsy of Coroner’s Reports: Mental Disorder and Reportable Deaths in the Criminal Justice System
Belinda Rochelle Crissman, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia
Compliance Challenges for Mental Health Court Clients: A Case Study
Carlie Luciana Leroux, University of Waterloo
Predicting the Presence of Mental Health and Substance Use Diagnoses among Former Foster Care Youth
Patricia Cantara, Rutgers University
The Morality of Compassion in Clinical Forensics: Expanding Cultural Context
Matt Draper, Utah Valley University
Collin Dean, Utah Valley University
Matthew Anderson, Utah Valley University
Juliann Ogilvie, Utah Valley University
Jan Spencer, Utah Valley University
Patricia Weaver, Utah Valley University
SESSION 563: POLICING UNREST AND SECURITY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David Bowman, Simon Fraser University
Policing Insecurities in a Post-Colonial World
Alpa Parmar, University of Leeds
252
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Protest Policing in the Era of "Occupy Wall Street"
Todd Lough, Western Illinois University
Unrestricted Access: Canadian Criminal Records at the United States Border
David Bowman, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 564: ROUNDTABLE: SEX TRAFFICKING/PROSTITUTION
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Entering, Maintaining, and Exiting “The Life”: An Exploratory Study of Youth Involved in Prostitution
Jennifer McMahon-Howard, Kennesaw State University
Evidence of a Typology of Trafficked Girls: Submissives, Sex Slaves, and Daredevils
Joan A. Reid, University of Massachusetts Lowell
The Effect of Deterrence-Based Efforts on the Intent to Buy Sexual Services in South Korea
Hyunin Baek, Kyonggi University, South Korea
Sungil Han, Kyonggi University
EuiGab Hwang, Kyonggi University
Women in Prostitution: Violence by Recruiters and Clients
Min Liu, Kean University
SESSION 565: ROUNDTABLE: REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS AS A CRIMINAL JUSTICE ISSUE
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Hartsfield, Bridgewater State University
Discussants:
Juanita Ortiz, University of Illinois Springfield
Meghan McGhee, Southwestern Oklahoma State University
David Nicholson, Missouri Western State University
SESSION 566: ROUNDTABLE: SPECIALTY COURTS
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
An Exploratory Look at the External Influences of Juvenile Drug Court Participants: Family Support, School Engagement, and Peer
Influence
Schannae Lucas, California Lutheran University
Examining Intermediate Outcomes and Program Implementation of a Veteran's Treatment Court
Julie Marie Baldwin, University of Florida
Religion, Islam, and the Expert Witness: Boundary Drawing and the Role of the Imam in the Canadian Court System
Jenna Valleriani, University of Toronto
Agata Piekosz, University of Toronto
SESSION 567: ROUNDTABLE: SURVEILLANCE AND CROSS-NATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Defining Surveillance in Contemporary Justice
Ian James Muir Warren, Deakin University, Geelong, Australia
Surveillance, Crime Policy, and Accountability
Darren Palmer, Deakin University
Urban Surveillance
Randy K. Lippert, University of Windsor
Kevin Walby, University of Victoria
Theorizing Surveillance Policy
Sean P. Hier, University of Victoria
253
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
SESSION 568: GENDER AND DRUGS I
Thursday, November 15 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Amanda Tyler, University of Colorado - Boulder
Racial Differences in the Exposure to Violent Events and Drug Use among Incarcerated Women
Kathryn M. Nowotny, University of Colorado - Boulder
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Shannon Lynch, Idaho State University
Dana DeHart, University of South Carolina
Bonnie L. Green, Georgetown University
Substance Use and Associated Psychological Distress and Lawbreaking among Victimized Women on Probation and Parole
Seana Golder, University of Louisville
Martin Hall, University of Louisville
Malitta Engstrom, University of Pennsylvania
Amanda J. Dishon, University of Louisville
Tanya Renn, University of Louisville
George Higgins, University of Louisville
T.K. Logan, University of Kentucky
The Female Halfway House: Triumphs and Trials of Transitional Living
Rachel L. Rayburn, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne
Kathleen Ellis-Creigh, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne
Christopher Bradley, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne
Mary E. Etheart, Hope House
The Gendered Nature of Substance Abuse for Delinquents
Amanda Tyler, University of Colorado - Boulder
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
MEETING
SESSION 569: DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY GENERAL BUSINESS MEETING
Thursday, November 15 - 4:30 pm to 5:50 pm
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
RECEPTION
SESSION 570: THE URBAN INSTITUTE RECEPTION
Thursday, November 15 - 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 571: INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE STUDY OF ORGANIZED CRIME
BUSINESS MEETING (IASOC)
Thursday, November 15 - 5:00 pm to 6:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
SESSION 572: POSTER SESSION
Thursday, November 15 - 5:00 pm to 7:00 pm
Grand/State Ballroom, 4th Floor
572-1
A Current Look at Campus Climate Research and Giving Voice to Graduate Students
Wendelin M. Hume, University of North Dakota
Moussa Nombre, University of North Dakota
Ziwei Qi, University of North Dakota
572-2
A Five Year Examination of Auto Accidents and Police Enforcement
Shamir Ratansi, Central Connecticut State University
David Dubiel, West Hartford Police Department
254
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-3
A Gendered Approach on Examining Manifestations of Stress for Police Officers
Nicole Lise Rosen, University of Akron
572-4
A Genetically-Informed Test of Early Influences on Childhood Self-Control
Richard P. Wiebe, Fitchburg State University
H. Harrington Cleveland, Pennsylvania State University
Jeffrey Stuewig, George Mason University
572-5
A Geospatial Assessment of Domestic Disturbance
Lauren Holt, The College of New Jersey
David Holleran, The College of New Jersey
572-6
A Geospatial Assessment of Domestic Violence
Stephanie Cregg, The College of New Jersey
David Holleran, The College of New Jersey
572-7
A Geospatial Assessment of Theft
Thomas Mladenetz, The College of New Jersey
David Holleran, The College of New Jersey
572-8
A Quantitative Analysis of the Effect of Race of Victim on the Collection and Analysis of Forensic DNA Evidence in Criminal
Cases
Amy van der Hoeven, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
572-9
A Quasi-Experimental Study of the Impact of a Specialized Community Risk Management Team for High-Risk Sex Offenders
Patrick Lussier, Universite Laval
572-10 A Re-Analysis of Shaw and McKay's Chicago Neighborhood Data
James P. Peters, Ohio State University
572-11 A Reanalysis of Interaction Effects of Suspects’ Characteristics and Demeanor on Police Behavior
Philip Colin Bolger, University of Cincinnati
572-12 A Retrospective Examination of Sexting among Teenagers
Donna M. Vandiver, Texas State University
Kathy Erin Martinez-Prather, Texas State University
572-13 A Spatial Analysis of Foreclosures and Domestic Disturbance Calls for Service
Kim Lersch, University of South Florida - Lakeland
Christine S. Sellers, University of South Florida
572-14 A Study of “Victim Awareness Program” in a Japanese Prison
Aika Tomoto, Chiba University
Hiroyuki Shinkai, Chiba Prison
Souichiro Omiya, Chiba University
Hirofumi Nishinaka, Chiba University
Yoshito Igarashi, Chiba University
Masaomi Iyo, Chiba University
572-15 A Test of the Self-Control Theory in a Mexican Population
Erin Grant, Texas State University
572-16 African American’s Experiences of Stereotype Threat in Police Encounters: The Influence of Past Criminal Contacts
Chelsea Renae Noblitt, University of Illinois at Chicago
Bette L. Bottoms, University of Illinois at Chicago
Cynthia J. Najdowski, University at Albany, SUNY
572-17 Age of Onset, Gender, and Persistent Offending Over Time
Yu-Ling Chiu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
572-18 Alcohol Use and Violence: Exploring the Relationship between Heavy Episodic Drinking and Arrest for a Serious Violent
Offense
Lia C. Wiley, University of Akron
255
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-19 Alcohol and Marijuana Use: A Test of Differential Association
Michael Wagner, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
572-20 An Analysis of the Social Construction of Adolescent Prescription Drug Abuse
Luke Andrew Norris, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
572-21 An Application of Risk Terrain Modeling to Analyze Simple Assault Occurrences
Adam Lipps, The College of New Jersey
David Holleran, The College of New Jersey
572-22 An Application of Risk Terrain Modeling to Residential Burglary
Rachel Levin, The College of New Jersey
David Holleran, The College of New Jersey
572-23 An Examination of Different Types of Treatment Courts
Andrew J. Myer, Viterbo University
Jaclyn S. Holger, Viterbo University
572-24 An Interactive Examination of Memorable Quotes from Over Ten Years of Correctional Assessment
Bobbie Ticknor, University of Cincinnati
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
572-25 AniCare Child: Treating Juvenile Animal Abusers, Preventing Future Violence
Lisa Lunghofer, MANILA Consulting Group, Inc.
Kenneth Shapiro, Animals and Society Institute
572-26 Animal Cruelty and Human Violence
Rhonda Kaye Delong, Code 4 Consulting
572-27 Another Day, another Crime: Daily Activities and Criminality
Derek Mueller, University of Cincinnati
Gabrielle Isaza, University of Cincinnati
John Paul Wright, University of Cincinnati
572-28 Arrest and Incarceration among Homeless Women in Three U.S. Cities
Kari Gentzler, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
572-29 As the “KRO” Flies: Criminal Path Mapping and Its Relationship to Environmental Crime Theories
John DeCarlo, University of New Haven
Christopher M. Sedelmaier, University of New Haven
Michael J. Jenkins, University of New Haven
572-30 Assessing Community Institutional Capacity (CIC) for Female Prisoner Reentry in Philadelphia: Preliminary Results
Danielle Jordan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
572-31 Beyond the Green Light: Marijuana Dispensaries and the Spatial Analysis of Crime
Carlos E. Rojas-Gaona, University of Cincinnati
572-32 Black, White and Gray: How Context Influences the Perception of Racial Profiling
Michele Quinones, Texas State University
572-33 Breaking the Silence: LGBTQ Allies on Campus
Maame Adomako, Central Michigan University
Justin M. Smith, Central Michigan University
Amanda Garrison, Central Michigan University
572-34 Building Youths' Connections to Decrease Police Contacts
Megan Greene, Chicago School of Professional Psychology
Camille R. Quinn, University of Illinois at Chicago
Kristy Skerrett, University of Illinois at Chicago
A. David Farmer, Northeastern Illinois University
Jaleel Abdul-Adil, University of Illinois at Chicago
256
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-35 CCTV Location Allocation in 3D Geographical Information System
Sang Jun Park, University of Cincinnati
Chunghyeon Seo, University of Florida
572-36 CHAID Analysis of Drug-Related Police Corruption Arrests
Philip M. Stinson, Bowling Green State University
John Liederbach, Bowling Green State University
Steven L. Brewer, Pennsylvania State University, Shenango
Hans D. Schmalzried, Bowling Green State University
Brooke E. Mathna, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Krista L. Long, Bowling Green State University
572-37 Campus Crime: A Geospatial and Temporal Perspective
Yeok-il Cho, University of Central Missouri
Seong min Park, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
572-38 Campus Law Enforcement Organization and Community Policing
Katy Hancock, University of Central Florida
572-39 Canine and Officer Relationships: Implications for Training
Catherine Marie Johnson, Illinois State University
Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Illinois State University
572-40 Causes of Deaths and Mortality Rates of Former Juvenile Delinquents in Estonia
Jüri Saar, University of Tartu
Anna Markina, University of Tartu
572-41 Characteristics of Homegrown Islamist Terrorists: Toward a Predictive Model of Homegrown Terror Tactics
Chardon L. Murray, University of North Carolina Wilmington
572-42 Child Pornography Offenders: Types and Typologies
Rebecca D. Petersen, Kennesaw State University
572-43 Collective Healing: Responding to Clergy-Perpetrated Sexual Abuse of Minors within the United States Roman Catholic
Church
Delene Bromirski, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
572-44 Communication and Character Development, Keystones in the New Transformative Justice Model
Billi Jo Starr, University of California, Santa Barbara
572-45 Comparative Predictors of Drug Court Program Performance among Traditional Clients and Clients with Co-Occurring
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Diagnoses
Megan Magers, University of Central Florida
572-46 Contributing Factors for the Professional Development and Promotion of the Next Generation of Women Leaders
Eloise M. Carnevale, Retired Chicago Police Detective
572-47 Contributing Factors to Police Deaths in Afghanistan
Tammy Castle, James Madison University
572-48 Coping Their Way Out of Crime and Back into Society
Amber Freitas, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Amanda Bolton, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Ethan Amidon, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Lee Ann Slocum, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Dan Duplantier, Development Services Group, Inc.
572-49 Coping with a Limited Capacity to Punish: A Replication
Jennifer M. Miller, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
James W. Golden, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
257
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-50 Coping with the Trauma of Being Wrongfully Convicted
Rashaan A. DeShay, University of Texas at Dallas
572-51 Copper Theft in the Media
Kevin Whiteacre, University of Indianapolis
Yuwei Xia, University of Indianapolis
Biying Zhou, University of Indianapolis
Zhou Qiunan, University of Indianapolis
Wei Xie, University of Indianapolis
Chad Posick, Northeastern University
572-52 Correlation between Institutional Misconduct and Recidivism
Marius Daniel Manac, University of Central Missouri
Jennifer Carson, University of Central Missouri
Scott Chenault, University of Central Missouri
572-53 Crime and the Economy: Economic Effects on the Crime Rates of Youngstown, Ohio
Janet Hassey, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-54 Criminal Justice Outcomes for Offenders with Mental Disorders in a Specialized Mental Health Unit
Megan Ann O'Connor, University of Texas at El Paso
Jennifer Eno Louden, University of Texas at El Paso
572-55 Criminal Justice Theory and Homeland Security Theory: Untying the Gordian Knott
Miriam A. DeLone, Fayetteville State University
Gregory J. DeLone, Fayetteville State University
572-56 Criminal Justice in Ireland: Reflections from a Study-Abroad Program
Diana Falco, Niagara University
Noelle Turner, SUNY Brockport
572-57 Criminality and Psychiatric Symptoms: Co-Occurring Targets for Treatment of the Mentally Disordered Offender
Angela Joyce Thielo, University of Cincinnati
572-58 Criminology, Conflict Resolution and Restorative Justice: The Diverse Uses of Peacemaking Circles
Adepeju Opeoluwa Solarin, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg, Germany
572-59 Cyberbulling: Evaluating the Overlap with Traditional Bullying Risk Factors
Zachary Rowan, University of Maryland, College Park
572-60 Death and Politics: The Role of Demographic Characteristics and Testimony Type in Death Penalty Cases Involving Future
Dangerousness Testimony
Amy Magnus, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Miliaikeala Heen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Joel Lieberman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Alexa Bejinariu, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Marie Mills, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
572-61 Decomposing the Court Process: Effects of Prosecutorial Discretion on Prison Population Growth
Shi Yan, University at Albany, SUNY
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
William J. Sabol, Bureau of Justice Statistics
572-62 Delinquency, Self-Control, Gender, and the Role of Neighborhood Context
Marie Angelete Bozin, University of Akron
572-63 Demographic and Recidivism Characteristics of Child Pornography Offenders
Jacob L. Hasson, Central Connecticut State University
Damon Mitchell, Central Connecticut State University
572-64 Deviance among Hispanic College Students
Lisa Marie Garcia, Texas A&M International University
Carlos Pacheco, Texas A&M International University
Claudia San Miguel, Texas A&M International University
258
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-65 Disciplinary Sanctions for Police Misconduct: An Empirical Assessment
Robert E. Worden, University at Albany, SUNY
Christopher J. Harris, University of Massachusetts Lowell
572-66 Do Execution Moratoriums Really Increase Homicide? Evidence from Illinois
Tomislav Kovandzic, University of Texas at Dallas
Lynne Vieraitis, University of Texas at Dallas
572-67 Does Sex Offender Treatment Lower Recidivism by Increasing Self-Control? Exploring Gottfredson and Hirschi’s Stability
Hypothesis
Jessica E. Middleton, University of Houston - Clear Lake
572-68 Drug Policies and the Reality of Drug-Use: A Look at Crimes Associated with Three Drugs
Wanda Leal, Florida State University
572-69 Drug Treatment Courts and the Elderly: An Examination of the Risks and Needs of Geriatric Drug Offenders
Briana Michelle Anderson, Slippery Rock University
Patrick J. Harvey, Slippery Rock University
Sarah Kuehn, Slippery Rock University
572-70 Drugs, Dangerous Driving, and Disorder: Crime and Decreased Quality of Boomtown Life
Natalie Rose Ortiz, Arizona State University
Rick Ruddell, University of Regina
Thomas Matthew, California State University, Chico
572-71 Educating Victimization Risk: Alternative Crime Prevention Strategies for College Campuses
Tyler John Vaughan, Texas State University
572-72 Educational Pathways from Juvenile Justice to Community College: Promoting Engagement in Education Rather than Crime
Jiffy Lansing, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago
Gretchen R. Cusick, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago
Nathan Hess, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago
572-73 Effectiveness of Street Gang Control Strategies: A Systematic Review of Evaluation Studies
Jennifer S. Wong, Simon Fraser University
Jason Gravel, Simon Fraser University
Karine Descormiers, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Carlo Morselli, Université de Montréal
572-74 Elite Deviance, Organized Crime, and Homicide Rates: A Cross-National Exploration
Carol L.S. Trent, University of South Florida
572-75 Endangered Runaways: Peer Influence vs. Adult Influence
Stephen Morewitz, California State University, East Bay
572-76 Epidemiology and Prescription Drug Abuse in Wyoming
Rodney A. Wambeam, University of Wyoming
Danielle M. Shields, Rutgers University
572-77 Ethics and Policing
Elsa Tenorio, Texas A&M International University
Wilma Davila, Texas A&M International University
Claudia San Miguel, Texas A&M International University
572-78 Evaluating an Early Intervention for At-Risk Middle School Youth
Lisa A. Rapp, University of South Florida
Chris Stewart
William Rowe, University of South Florida
572-79 Evaluation of Two Law Enforcement Violence Risk Assessment and Management Methods
Klara Svalin, Malmo University, Sweden
Caroline Mellgren, Malmo University, Sweden
259
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-80 Evaluation of the Transportation Security Administration’s Comprehensive Strategy to Security at Airports
Heather Vovak, George Mason University
Jaspreet Chahal, George Mason University
572-81 Examination of Community Perceptions of Sex Offenders
Barbara Smith, Texas State University
Donna M. Vandiver, Texas State University
572-82 Examination of Lone-Wolf Terrorists Radicalized into Violent Extremism within The United States
Kristyn Schlimgen, Indiana State University
572-83 Examining the Effectiveness of Drug Courts in Rural Midwest
Jana Bufkin, Drury University
Vickie Luttrell, Drury University
572-84 Examining the Effectiveness of Foot Patrol in Micro-Places
Kenneth J. Novak, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Christine Carr, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Scott Finley, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Alexander M. Holsinger, University of Missouri - Kansas City
572-85 Examining the Linkage between Educational Achievement, Family Background and Delinquency among Urban Youth
LaShawndra Hooks, Hampton University
Zina McGee, Hampton University
572-86 Experiences as a Student in a Prison Class
Dylan Davenport, Bridgewater State University
572-87 Explaining Incarceration Pursuant to Support Debt in Canada 2000-2010
Paul Millar, Nipissing University
572-88 Exploring Crime and Place: Adding Context to Crime Maps - A Scottish Vandalism Case Study
Ellie J.W. Bates, University of Edinburgh
572-89 Exploring Differences in Court Outcomes across Public Defender Offices
Jacqueline Campbell, University of Maryland
572-90 Exposure to Criminogenic Settings among Adolescent Girls
Marie Torstensson Levander, Malmo University, Sweden
Anna-Karin Ivert, Malmo University, Sweden
572-91 Eyewitness Identification: Photo Array Administration and Human Memory
Michael M. Berlin, Coppin State University
Katherine A. Cameron, Coppin State University
572-92 Families of Gang-Affiliated Probationers
Shytierra Gaston, University of Missouri - St. Louis
572-93 Family Wellness Education for People in Prison
Linda Green Bell, Indiana University
572-94 Fear of Crime and Border Security
Diana L. Carreon, Texas A&M International University
572-95 Feelings of Safety among Aging Prisoners: Do Limiting Conditions Increase Fear?
Jill Kathleen Doerner, University of Rhode Island
Wendi E. Goodlin-Fahncke, University of Toledo
572-96 Female Offenders: Coping with Reentry and Dual Diagnosis
Susan Koski, Central Connecticut State University
Kathleen Bantley, Central Connecticut State University
260
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-97 Female Youth and Victimization: An Examination of Traditional and Cyber Methods of Bullying
Gurjeet Kaur Brar, California State University, Long Beach
Ryan Fischer, California State University, Long Beach
572-98 Female-Only Legal Defenses: Implications for Concepts of Reasonableness
Jennifer Silcox, University of Western Ontario
572-99 Feminists are Man-Haters: A Comparative Analysis of Hate Speech on Feminist and “Manist” Blogs
Ashley Wiegand, Central Michigan University
Jacob Goffnett, Central Michigan University
Rebecca Hayes, Central Michigan University
572-100 Filmmaking Criminology: Understanding Crime through Film
Paul Sutton, San Diego State University
Lori Sutton, San Diego State University
572-101 Finding Freedom through Expression
Paul Sutton, San Diego State University
Lori Sutton, San Diego State University
572-102 Foreclosure and Crime in a Suburban Setting
Zoe E. Vitter, George Mason University
572-103 From Head Lice to HIV: Diseases Plaguing America’s Prisons
Cassandra Stroman, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-104 Fulbright for Criminologists
Everette Penn, University of Houston - Clear Lake
572-105 Gang Territories: A Comparison of Identification Methods
Amy W. Deger, University of Cincinnati
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
572-106 Gang-Related Homicides and Domestic Homicides in Brooklyn, NYC: A Geospatial Analysis
Cassandra Ramdath, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Brittany E. Hayes, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
572-107 Gender Bias among Jurors
Lisa Mae Olson, University of North Dakota
572-108 Gender Differences in Hazing Rituals
Melissa Bette Vazquez, Texas State University - San Marcos
572-109 Gender, Neighborhoods, and Violent Behavior: A Reexamination of Social Disorganization Theory and a Testing of Street
Code
Man Kit Lei, University of Georgia
Ronald Simons, University of Georgia
Mary E.B. Edmond, University of Georgia
572-110 Geographical Profiling: Spatial Relationships between Serial Sexual Murderer Anchor Points and Crime Locations and Types
Elishewah Weisz, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
572-111 Geospatial and Statistical Analyses of Violent Crime in a Major Midwestern City
Stacie A. Jergenson, University of North Dakota
572-112 Getting Arrestees to Cooperate with the Police
Cody Jorgensen, University of Texas at Dallas
572-113 Got Shame? Applying Reintegrative Shaming Theory to Inmates
Scott Alden Mathers, Mississippi State University
572-114 Hearing Voices: Teaching with Prisoner-Generated Materials
Melissa Munn, Okanagan College
261
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-115 Homicide: Relying on Legal Outcomes as Behavioral Measures
Anne Li Kringen, Texas State University - San Marcos
Jonathan G. Allen, Texas State University
572-116 How Do Cons Define Wrongful Conviction? An Investigation of the Perspectives of Canadian Federal Parolees
Alyx A. Ivany, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Kimberley A. Clow, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
572-117 How Patrol Officers Make Decisions: Comparing a Structural Model to a Process Model
Heidi Bonner, East Carolina University
572-118 How Punitive is Your Governor?: An Examination of Punitiveness in Gubernatorial Rhetoric
Jennifer Stevens, Purdue University
572-119 Identifying Limitations in the Criminal Justice Response to Same-Sex Intimate Partner Violence
Kami C. McKnight, University of New Haven
Jessica Langley, University of New Haven
572-120 Interpersonal Conflict within Emerging Adult Romantic Relationships
Chelsea Shotwell Tabke, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Chitra Raghavan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
572-121 Interrogation as a Social Dance: How Social Identity Influences Perceived Effectiveness of Interrogation Methods
Sami Abdel-Salam, University of Delaware
Christopher E. Kelly, University at Albany, SUNY
Jeanee C. Miller, University at Albany, SUNY
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
572-122 Intimate Partner Abuse, Stalking, and the Criminal Justice Response
Heather Melton, University of Utah
572-123 Is Breed Specific Legislation Effective? A Look at Pit Bull Discrimination
Erica White, Northeastern University
572-124 Is There a Place for Restorative Justice in Violent Crimes?
Brandi Vigil, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-125 It Does Happen: Sexual Violence in the Caribbean
Rebecca Hayes, Central Michigan University
Souyenne Dathorne, PROSAF-Surviving Sexual Abuse in the Caribbean
Velika Lawrence, PROSAF-Surviving Sexual Abuse in the Caribbean
572-126 Juror Typologies and DNA Comprehension: Who Benefits from Jury Trial Innovations?
Mari Sakiyama, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Joel Lieberman, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
572-127 Just How "Masked" is the Psychopath? Lay Observers' Abilities to Perceive Psychopathic Traits in Others
Jennifer Lap, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Maria Hartwig, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
572-128 Justice for Juveniles in the Juvenile Court System?
Christina Foster, Western Carolina University
572-129 Justice in Mexico
Michael Donato Paradis, University of New Haven
572-130 Juvenile Arrest Patterns in Rochester, NY
Pedro Vazquez, SUNY Brockport
Melchor de Guzman, SUNY Brockport
572-131 Juvenile Delinquency and Deviance in China and Social Bonding Theory: An Examination of Involvement and Commitment
Allison L. Timbs, Campbellsville University
262
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-132 Juvenile Recidivism in Florida: The Roles of Education and Work Experiences
Wendy Cavendish, University of Miami
Amie L. Nielsen, University of Miami
572-133 Juvenile School-Related Victimization: A Latent Growth Curve Model
Shaun M. Gann, University of Cincinnati
572-134 Labeling the Hood: Exploring Ecological Labels through Resident Responses
Joseph Moloney, West Chester University
572-135 Latino Women's Perceptions of Domestic Violence
Lisa Murphy, La Sierra University
Evelyn Felix, La Sierra University
572-136 Law Enforcement Contact of the Nebraska DMC Assessment
Candace Behrens, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Anne Hobbs, University of Nebraska at Omaha
572-137 Law Enforcement Officers' Theoretical Commitments and Their Effects on Attitudes toward Punitiveness
Caitlin Grace Lynch, California State University, Fresno
572-138 Legislative Accident? When Automatic Prosecution of Juveniles as Adults Collides with Mandatory Life without Parole – The
Case of Jacqueline Montanez
Aubri F. McDonald, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-139 Lifetime Bonds: At-Risk Youth and At-Risk Dogs Helping One Another
Lisa Lunghofer, MANILA Consulting Group, Inc.
Cynthia L. Bathurst, Safe Humane Chicago
572-140 Like Father, Like Son: An Exploration of Family Sexual Abuse
Manos Daskalou, University of Northampton
572-141 Low-Level Offenses and Excessive Force: A Protocol Development for the Seattle Police Department
Kimberly M. Shea, Seattle University
Mary K. Jordan, Seattle University
Marda Williams, Seattle University
Cecilie Wilhelm, Seattle University
572-142 Media Viewership and Opinions on Torture
Emily J. Berglin, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
572-143 Mental Health and Social Disorganization
Alesa Liles, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
572-144 Morality and Crime: Preliminary Considerations
Zachary V. Loftus, Florida State University
572-145 Multi-Jurisdictional Task Forces and Border Crime: What Works
Cynthia Burke, San Diego Association of Governments
Darlanne Mulmat, San Diego Association of Governments
572-146 News Coverage of Chicago Homicides
Tina Johnson, Chicago Project for Violence Prevention
572-147 Obstacles to Developing and Implementing Problem-Oriented Policing Projects in Police Agencies
Kristine-Gem D. Estrella, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Victoria L. Luong, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Tamara D. Madensen, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
572-148 Offender-Victim Relationships in Far-Right Homicides: The Influence of Location in Ideologically and Non-Ideologically
Motivated Homicides
Katharine Boyd, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Brittany E. Hayes, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
263
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-149 Offending Consistency among Serial Sex Offenders: For Whom? A Look at Offender Characteristics
Nadine Deslauriers-Varin, Simon Fraser University
Eric Beauregard, Simon Fraser University
572-150 Older Parolees: A Profile
Megan Van Wallendael, The College of New Jersey
Andrea Patrick, The College of New Jersey
Mary Johnston, The College of New Jersey
Michael Camastra, The College of New Jersey
Margaret E. Leigey, The College of New Jersey
572-151 Older People and the Crimes They Commit
Michael James Palmiotto, Wichita State University
572-152 Operation Walid: Uncovering bin-Laden’s Replacement in al-Qaeda
Edith Wu, Simon Fraser University
Rebecca Carleton, Simon Fraser University
Garth Davies, Simon Fraser University
572-153 Outcomes for a Prison Nursery
Kevin Whiteacre, University of Indianapolis
James Owen, University of Indianapolis
Stephanie Fritz, University of Indianapolis
572-154 Overestimating Sex Offender Recidivism: Public Opinion of an East Tennessee State University Sample
Jessica M. Duncan, East Tennessee State University
Nicole Prior, East Tennessee State University
572-155 Parole Reform in California: Parolee Perceptions of Supervision
Joseph Ray Tatar, University of California, Irvine
Helen Braithwaite, University of California, Irvine
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
572-156 Paternal Attachment and Hispanics: Discovering the Link between Attachment and Self-Control
Lorna L. Alvarez-Rivera, University of South Florida Polytechnic
Wesley Jennings, University of South Florida
Lonn Lanza-Kaduce, University of Florida
572-157 Perpetrator Force and Victim Resistance during Sexual Assault
Melissa Decker, Catholic Charities, Diocese of Metuchen
Abbie Tuller, North Brooklyn Coalition Against Family Violence
Chitra Raghavan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
572-158 Police Eyewitness Credibility in Criminal Trials
Sarah Scott, Texas State University - San Marcos
Beth A. Sanders, Texas State University - San Marcos
Joycelyn M. Pollock, Texas State University - San Marcos
572-159 Police v. Prosecutors: Issues of Crime Investigation in South Korea
Kyung Yon Jhi, University of Nebraska Kearney
572-160 Popular Music and Popular Drugs: The Impact of Illicit Substance References on America’s Youth in the Millennium
Chantal Fahmy, Arizona State University
572-161 Poverty, Economic Inequality, and Homicide
Irshad Altheimer, Rochester Institute of Technology
572-162 Predicting the Location of New Homeless Encampments
Sharon Chamard, University of Alaska Anchorage
572-163 Preparing Local Law Enforcement to Prevent and Respond to Terrorism”
Lynne Snowden, University of North Carolina Wilmington
264
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-164 Preventing Crimes of Public Officials: A Case Study of European Countries
Yun seun Ha, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Seong min Park, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
572-165 Procedural Justice in Three Types of Police-Citizen Contacts
Sarah J. McLean, The John F. Finn Institute for Public Safety, Inc.
Robert E. Worden, University at Albany, SUNY
572-166 Promoting Courage: Preliminary Results from an Evaluation of Harbor House of Central Florida’s Domestic Violence Primary
Prevention Initiative Project Courage
Jordana Nicole Navarro, University of Central Florida
Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida
572-167 Promoting Knowledge Transfer among Community Correctional Facilities
Beth Ellefson, University of Cincinnati
Lori Brusman-Lovins, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
572-168 Prosecuting Intimate Partner Sexual Assault: Legal and Extralegal Factors that Influence Charging Decisions
Eryn Nicole O'Neal, California State University, Los Angeles
Katharine Tellis, California State University, Los Angeles
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
572-169 Prosecutorial Paradigm? The Impact of Prior Prosecutorial Experience on Justices’ Voting Decisions in Criminal Procedure
Cases
Rhys Hester, Appalachian State University
Kirk A. Randazzo, University of South Carolina
572-170 Protective Factors for Juvenile Delinquents at Risk for Re-Engaging in Delinquent Behaviors
Kimberly Haller, Fairleigh Dickinson University
572-171 Public Demonstration Management in a New Era of Policing
Jonathan Zachariah Gallar, Seattle University
Stefanie Jones, Seattle University
Jane E. Poore, Seattle University
Kyle Jason Schwab, Seattle University
572-172 Puppies in Prison
Cody Inman, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-173 Race-Based Sentencing Disparities and Defense Attorneys' Decisions and Beliefs in the Federal System
Jasmine Renee Silver, Pennsylvania State University
572-174 Racial Disparity in Media Coverage of Missing Children
Jennifer M. Brown, Florida State University
Kaleena J. Burkes, Florida State University
572-175 Rape Myth Acceptance and Coercive Behavior: Sex Differences
Susan Scott, Sam Houston State University
Jeffery A. Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
572-176 Rape Myth Acceptance: An Exploration of Influential Factors among College Students
Katie L. Swope, Stevenson University
572-177 Recidivism among Texas Parolees
Rosario Benavides, Texas A&M International University
Claudia San Miguel, Texas A&M International University
572-178 Recidivism and Changes in LSI-R Domain Scores
Brenda Vose, University of North Florida
572-179 Reconsidering Race and Class as Criminogenic Influences among American Youth
Nora Wikoff, Washington University in St. Louis
265
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-180 Reducing Disproportionate Minority Contact by Using Functional Family Therapy
Nathaniel Eugene Terrell, Emporia State University
572-181 Regional and Institutional Differences in Sexual Assault Victimization among College Students
Sarah Napper, University of West Georgia
Lee Michael Johnson, University of West Georgia
Todd Matthews, University of West Georgia
572-182 Representations of Crime and Violence in Walt Disney Movies
Jennifer Welch, Buena Vista University
Stephanie Hays, Buena Vista University
572-183 Representations of Female Street-Level Prostitutes by the Film Industry
Raleigh Blasdell, University of South Florida
572-184 Representing the ‘Other’: Exploring the Coverage of Honour Killings in the Canadian Media
Negin Vatandoost, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
572-185 Restorative Discipline in Schools: An Alternative or the Solution
Holli Vah Seliskar, Kaplan University
572-186 Rethinking Battered Asian Immigrant Women in South Korea
Younoh Cho, Dongguk University
Okkyung Yoon, Kyonggi University
572-187 Revisiting Employment Programs: Their Effectiveness at Reducing Recidivism and Factors Correlated with Employment
Success
Lydie Loth, University of Cincinnati
572-188 Risk Assessment of Gun Incidents in Little Rock: A STAC and RTM Approach
Grant Drawve, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
572-189 Risk and Protective Factors for Drug and Alcohol Use
Ricardo Arizola, Texas A&M International University
Raymundo Maldonado, Texas A&M International University
Briana Garcia, Texas A&M International University
Melissa Rangel, Texas A&M International University
Claudia San Miguel, Texas A&M International University
572-190 Risk of Intentional and Unintentional Violent Death: Applying a Gendered Life Course Perspective
Mary Frame, Baldwin Wallace University
572-191 Risk-Taking Behaviors in West Texas Youth: A Community Action Research Approach
Elizabeth Trejos-Castillo, Texas Tech University
Matthew Carroll, Texas Tech University
572-192 Robert K. Merton's Anomie Theory
Shannon Rene Leslie, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-193 Routine Activities and the Likelihood of Arrest
Shaun A. Thomas, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
Grant Drawve, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
572-194 Routine Justice: A Multivariate Analysis of Police Behavior in Routine Traffic Stops
Jeremy Stone Briggs, Kansas State University
572-195 Rules of Violence: Life inside a Mixed Martial Arts Gym
Brooke Mayfield, University of Missouri - St. Louis
572-196 Scarlet Letters: Sex Offender Housing in Central Texas
Rebecca Lea Nealon Roberie, Texas State University
572-197 School Disorder and the Current Strategies Utilized: An Analysis of Texas Schools
Joseph M. McKenna, Texas State University - San Marcos
266
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-198 School Violence and Academic Learning Environments in U.S.A and Korea: Utilizing the International Educational Database
of the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study 2007
Young-an Kim, University of Texas at El Paso
Gang Lee, University of Texas at El Paso
572-199 Seasonal Variation in Homicides
Karise Marise Carrillo, University at Albany, SUNY
David McDowall, University at Albany, SUNY
572-200 Self-Control, Deviant Peers, and Contacts with Authorities
Ana Maria Lobos, University of Miami
572-201 Serial Killers and Their Victims: A Content Analysis of Media and Scholarly Reports on Serial Homicide
Denise Paquette Boots, University of Texas at Dallas
Jennifer Wareham, Wayne State University
572-202 Shoot First, Ask Questions Later: An Examination of Alabama's Castle Law
Andrew J. Myer, Viterbo University
Mitchell B. Chamlin, Texas State University - San Marcos
572-203 Should I? Factors that Lead to Victim Reporting of Stalking Incidents
Stacie Merken, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-204 Simultaneously Testing the Effects of Four Self-Control Measures on Deviance in a Sample of Czech Adolescents
Rachael Looney, University of Kentucky
Alexander T. Vazsonyi, University of Kentucky
572-205 Spatial Analysis of High-Risk Recidivism Areas: Offender Release Residences in Areas of Social Disorganization
Jennifer Haegele, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
572-206 Specialized and General Offending from Adolescence into Emerging Adulthood
Helene R. White, Rutgers University
Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
572-207 Strip Searches of Inmates and Students: Confusion or Clarity in the “Special Needs” Search area?
Christopher D. Totten, Kennesaw State University
572-208 Systematic Social Observation: Street-Level Bureaucrats in Canada and Factors Affecting Differential Responses to Crime
Lindsay Van Wyck, University of Waterloo
Jennifer L. Schulenberg, University of Waterloo
572-209 Testing Criminological Theory Using Self-Report and Neuropsychological Measures of Self-Control
Rebecca Hana Umbach, University of Pennsylvania
Jill Portnoy, University of Pennsylvania
Liana Soyfer, University of Pennsylvania
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Ruben Gur, University of Pennsylvania
572-210 Testing Optimal Methods for the Collection of Data on Rape and Sexual Assault
Shannan Catalano, Bureau of Justice Statistics
David Cantor, Westat, Inc.
Michele Harmon, Westat Inc.
572-211 The American Dream, Anomie, and Crime
Jessica Mendoza, Texas A&M International University
Elizabeth Ortiz, Texas A&M International University
Karla Oliva, Texas A&M International University
Claudia San Miguel, Texas A&M International University
267
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-212 The Cost of Reporting: Examining Social Support and Comorbidity on Tangible Costs to Rape Victims
Jessica N. Mitchell, University of South Florida
Stephanie M. Bramm, University of South Florida
572-213 The Debate on Juvenile Life without Parole Sentences: Why Youth are Less Culpable
Kayla Marie Martensen, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-214 The Ecology of the Missing and No-Show Summoned Jurors in Cook County, IL, 2005
James L. LeBeau, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
572-215 The Effect of Individuals' Residences and Socioeconomic Status on Their Perceptions of Crime
Katlyn Speary, Elizabethtown College
572-216 The Effects of Family Dynamics on Juvenile Delinquency
Catherine A. Vassighi, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-217 The Effects of New York State’s Rockefeller Anti-Drug Laws on Violent Crime
Alexander Drayer, University of Northern Colorado
Brittany Groot, University of Northern Colorado
572-218 The Effects of Perceived Safety, Pre-Incarceration Mental Health, and Prison Victimization on Post-Release Psychological
Functioning
Ashley Schappell, Rutgers University
Paul Boxer, Rutgers University
572-219 The Epidemiology of Homicide Followed by Suicide in the United States
Mary Vriniotis, Harvard Injury Control Research Center
Catherine Barber, Harvard Injury Control Research Center
572-220 The Geography of Citizen Crime Reporting
Elise Wisnieski, CeaseFire, University of Illinois at Chicago
Stephanie Anastasia Bologeorges, University of Illinois at Chicago
David B. Henry, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-221 The Governance of Security and Risk for Mega-Events: Glasgow Commonwealth Games (G2014)
Michele Jane Burman, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Simon Mackenzie, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Suzanne Young, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Nick Fyfe, University of Dundee / Scottish Institute of Policing Research
Niall Hamilton-Smith, University of Stirling / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Jonny Pickering, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
572-222 The Impact of Duration of Risk Exposure on Gang Involvement
Kirstin A. Morgan, University at Albany, SUNY
572-223 The Impact of System Factors on Length of Time in Residential Reentry Centers
Jennifer Lerch, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
572-224 The Influence of Correctional Affiliation on Attitudes toward Punishment and Rehabilitation, Correctional Recreation, and
Weightlifting in Prison
Katharine A. Pawelko, Western Illinois University
Michael L. McGowan, Western Illinois University
Thomas K. Anderson, Lyndon State College
572-225 The Influence of Sleep on Adolescent Deviance and Weapon Carrying/Use in Georgian and Swiss National Samples
Charlene Harris, University of Kentucky
Alexander T. Vazsonyi, University of Kentucky
Agnes Machaty, University of Kentucky
Rachael Looney, University of Kentucky
Pagava Karaman, Tbilisi State Medical University, Tbilisi, Georgia
Helen Phagava, Institute of Medical Biotechnology / Ministry of Education and Science of Georgia
268
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Pierre-Andre Michaud, GRSA, IUMSP, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
572-226 The Lost Aggravator: Implications for Capital Murder Sentencing When Juries Reject an Aggravating Circumstance
Dwayne Smith, University of South Florida
Beth Bjerregaard, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Sondra J. Fogel, University of South Florida
572-227 The Matrix Demonstration Project: Incorporating Police Research into Field Training
Julie Grieco, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
572-228 The Meaning of Social Class in Criminology and Why the Variable is overlooked
Key Sun, Central Washington University
572-229 The Permanence of Crime Concentrations: Analyzing Hot Spot Mobility over Time and Space
Michael J. Deckard, University of Missouri - St. Louis
572-230 The Police-Crime Relationship in Rural Communities
Lisa M. Pudlo, University of Massachusetts Lowell
572-231 Selecting into Violence: Do Race, Self-Esteem and Self-Efficacy Matter?
Angela Kaufman, Bowling Green State University
572-232 The Racial Profiling of Females in the Canadian Criminal Justice System
Sumaio Abdi Hashi Ugas, Ryerson University
Tammy Landau, Ryerson University
572-233 The Reporting of Sexual Offenses to the Police
Francis Danso Boateng, Washington State University
Heeuk Dennis Lee, Washington State University
572-234 The Role of Gender in Perceptions of Sex Offenders and Sex Offender Laws
Michelle Lynn Meloy, Rutgers University - Camden
Jessica Boatwright, Rutgers University - Camden
Kristin Curtis, Rutgers University - Camden
Tara Woolfolk, Rutgers University - Camden
572-235 The Role of Parents and Parens Patriae: Developing Views of Legitimacy and Justice in Juvenile Delinquency Court
Liana Jean Pennington, Northeastern University
572-236 The State of Surveying Courtroom Actors in Criminal Justice Research
Whitney Flesher, University of Cincinnati
Angela Reitler, University of Cincinnati
572-237 The Unintended Consequences of U.S. International Drug Control Law
Jonathan Ball, Suffolk University
Christos Koutrobis, Suffolk University
572-238 The Use of Risk Assessment in Judicial Sentencing Decisions
David MacAlister, Simon Fraser University
Cristina Pastia, Simon Fraser University
Rebecca Carleton, Simon Fraser University
572-239 Theoretical Perspectives on the Policing of Transphobic Hate Crime in London
Joanna Jamel, Kingston University
572-240 Thinking "Visually" about Context: The Creativity of Undergraduate Criminal Justice Students
Susan R. Takata, University of Wisconsin - Parkside
572-241 Time to Consider: Timing of Parental Incarceration on Mastery
Unique Shaw, Bowling Green State University
572-242 Routine Activities and Violent Victimization among Juveniles in South Korea
Sujung Cho, University of Cincinnati
269
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
Cheong Sun Park, Korean National Police University
John Wooldredge, University of Cincinnati
572-243 Tinker, Soldier, Criminal, Prisoner
Paula Bowles, University of Northampton
572-244 To Be or Not To Be Certified
Debra Ross, Grand Val0ley State University
Kimberly Greenlees, Grand Valley State University
572-245 Tracking IPA: Using Social Disorganization Theory to Analyze Intimate Partner Abuse in Chicago
Rachel Morgan, University of Central Florida
Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida
572-246 Trends and Patterns in Serious Violence against the Police
Xuei Xing, University of South Carolina
Robert J. Kaminski, University of South Carolina
572-247 Undergraduate Student Perceptions of HIV Transmission and the Canadian Criminal Justice System
Michael Perkins, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
572-248 Understanding Acquaintance Assault: What Factors Lead to Young People Being Victimized More by People They Know?
Darla Elaine Drummond, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
572-249 Understanding Cyberbullying in the NET Generation: A Cross-Cultural Meta-Analysis
Timothy Oblad, Texas Tech University
Elizabeth Trejos-Castillo, Texas Tech University
572-250 Understanding Female Violent Offending in China: A Socialist Feminist Perspective
Guo Wan, Sam Houston State University
572-251 United States Citizenship and Immigration Services: An Examination of the Militarization and the Plight with Drug and Gang
Violence on the U.S./Mexican Border
Frank Anthony Rodriguez, Mercyhurst University
John Jacob Rodriguez, University of Texas at Arlington
Arthur Gregory Vasquez, University of Texas at Dallas
572-252 Using Immersive Virtual Reality and Ecological Psychology to Probe into Child Molesters' Phenomenology
Sarah Michelle Neveu, Université du Québec à Montréal
Patrice Renaud, Université du Québec en Outaouais
Jean Proulx, Université de Montréal
572-253 Using the General Theory of Crime to Explain Texting While Driving
Phillip Neil Quisenberry, McKendree University
572-254 Variation in Federal Terrorism Case Outcomes from Geopolitical Factors Based Location of Trials
Paxton Roberts, University of Arkansas
Christopher A. Shields, University of Arkansas
572-255 Victim Worthiness: Sexual Victimization and Obstacles to Bystander Intervention in the College Drinking Scene
Brandie Pugh, Ohio University
Tom Vander Ven, Ohio University
Holly Ningard, Ohio University
572-256 Victimization and Perceptions of the Criminal Justice System
Samantha Aeby, Ryerson University
Heather Rollwagen, Ryerson University
572-257 Victimized but Unpublicized: Untold Stories of Everyone Else
Melissa Tetzlaff-Bemiller, University of Central Florida
Aaron C. Poole, University of Central Florida
James C. McCutcheon, University of Central Florida
270
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15
572-258 Violence and Crime: Implications for Judicial Intervention in Child and Family Matters
Raquel Matos, Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Catarina Ribeiro, Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Milena Matos, Universidade Católica Portuguesa
Claudio Reis, Universidade Católica Portuguesa
572-259 Violence, Restraint, and Weapon Use in Stranger Rapes of Male Victims
Katrin Ursula Mueller-Johnson, University of Cambridge
Samantha Lundrigan, Anglian Ruskin University
572-260 We Were on the Same Side: Gender-Based Violence and Political Conflict in Kibera, Kenya
Elizabeth Swart, University of Central Florida
572-261 What Variables Mediate the Effects of Formal Labeling on Future Delinquency?
Emily Restivo, New York Institute of Technology
572-262 When Youth Express Feelings of Suicidal Ideation and Loneliness We Should be Concerned
Henrika McCoy, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-263 When a Juvenile Expresses Feelings of Suicidal Ideation and Loneliness We Should be Concerned
Henrika McCoy, University of Illinois at Chicago
572-264 With a Little Help from my Friends: Juvenile Co-Offending and Its Predictors
Thomas Zawisza, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
572-265 Within-Treatment Outcomes and Recidivism among Sexual and Violent Offenders
Andreas Schwedler, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Gunda Woessner, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
572-266 Wrongful Conviction: Could Prosecutorial Misconduct be Solved Through a Change in Brady v. Maryland?
Denise Mowder, Metropolitan State College of Denver
572-267 Youth Crime: Interpretation of the Phenomenon in Light of Robert Agnew’s General Strain Theory
Ewa Czerwińska-Jakimiuk, Pedagogical University of Cracow
572-268 Youth and Violence in Brazil: Exploring Youth’s Narratives about Street Violence Related to Drug and Social Order in
Brazil’s Most Violent City
Cléssio Moura de Souza, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, Freiburg, Germany
572-269 “Expressing” Criminological Theories
Rosa Chang, Florida International University
SOCIAL
SESSION 573: DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY SOCIAL
Thursday, November 15 - 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm
Adams Room, 6th Floor
SOCIAL
SESSION 574: DIVISION ON CORRECTIONS AND SENTENCING HAPPY HOUR SOCIAL
Thursday, November 15 - 7:00 pm to 8:30 pm
Flat Top Stir-Fry Grill (Off Site / 30 S. Wabash)
RECEPTION
SESSION 575: CAROLINA ACADEMIC PRESS RECEPTION
Thursday, November 15 - 7:00 pm to 10:00 pm
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
271
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
MEETING
SESSION 576: DIVISION ON WOMEN AND CRIME BREAKFAST
Friday, November 16 - 7:30 am to 9:00 am
Adams Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 577: CRIMINOLOGY EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 7:30 am to 8:30 am
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 578: RATES AND TRENDS OF CHILDHOOD EXPOSURE TO CRIME, VIOLENCE AND
ABUSE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Kristin Kracke, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
Trends in Child Victimization in the United States: The 2008 and 2011 National Surveys of Children Exposed to Violence
(NATSCEV)
David Finkelhor, University of New Hampshire
The Prevalence and Consequences of Child Poly-Victimization
Heather A. Turner, University of New Hampshire
Family Violence Victimization Known to Police and Other Authorities: Reporting Trends, Police Response, and Perceptions of Police
and Other Services
Sherry Hamby, Sewanee: The University of the South
Discussant:
Kristin Kracke, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 579: ANALYZING THE ROLE OF JUDICIAL ACTIVISM AND RESTRAINT IN THE
CONSTITUTIONALIZATION OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, POLICY, AND PRACTICE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sue Carter Collins, Georgia State University
The Warren Court: The Epitome of Judicial Activism
Sue Carter Collins, Georgia State University
Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Illinois State University
The Rehnquist Court: Leading The Counter-Revolution
Cynthia Brown, University of Central Florida
The Roberts' Court: What will be its Legacy?
Sue Carter Collins, Georgia State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 580: EVIDENCE-BASED CRIME POLICY II
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Charlotte E. Gill, George Mason University
272
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Effects of Custodial Versus Non-Custodial Sanctions on Reoffending: A Meta-Analysis
Gwladys Gilliéron, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Patrice Villettaz, University of Lausanne
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
Injury Records as a Violence Outcome Measure in Systematic Reviews
Vaseekaran Sivarajasingam, Cardiff University
Jonathan Shepherd, Cardiff University
Can "Disciplined Passion" Overcome the Cynical View? An Empirical Inquiry of Evaluator Influence
Brandon C. Welsh, Northeastern University
Anthony A. Braga, Rutgers University / Harvard University
Meghan E. Hollis, Northeastern University
A Systematic Review of the Juvenile Justice Literature: What It Does (Not) Reveal About Effective Interventions
Michelle Evans-Chase, University of Pennsylvania
Huiquan Zhou, Chinese University of Hong Kong
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 581: CRIME AND GOVERNANCE IN THE CONTEMPORARY UNITED STATES
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Chrysanthi Leon, University of Delaware
The Paradox of Governing through Crime
William Garriott, James Madison University
Chrysanthi Leon, University of Delaware
Female Prostitutes, Neoliberalism and Resilience
Corey Shdaimah, University of Maryland
Chrysanthi Leon, University of Delaware
Mobilizing "Community": Civic Engagement and Sex Offender Protests
Monica Williams, University of California, Davis
Spillover and Militarization: Constructing Citizenship on the U.S. Mexican Border
Miguel Diaz-Barriga, University of Texas - Pan American
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 582: RESTORATIVE OFFENDER REENTRY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
RJ Wrap-Around: Reentry Phases with Restorative Supports
Gordon Bazemore, Florida Atlantic University
The Modern Social Contract: Using the Veil of Ignorance in Restorative Reentry Decision Making
Tanya Settles, Norwich University
From the Inside/Out: Greene County Jail Inmates on Restorative Reentry
Aida Hass, Missouri State University
Caryn Saxon, Missouri State University
Restorative Reentry: Are We Having the Wrong Conversation?
Kathryn Fox, University of Vermont
Discussant:
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
273
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 583: NEW RESEARCH IN CULTURAL CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephen Muzzatti, Ryerson University
Beyond "Gang" Discourse: Understanding Street Social Capital in the Liquid City
Jonathan Ilan, University of Kent
Fighting for the Greater Good? Negotiating the Culturally Constructed Concept of "Legitimacy" in Ice Hockey Violence
Victoria Silverwood, Cardiff University
Securing Vision: Visual Economies, Pacification, and the U.S. Security State
Tyler Wall, Eastern Kentucky University
Travis Linnemann, Old Dominion University
Visual Criminology
Wayne Morrison, Queen Mary, University of London
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 584: CRIMINAL JUSTICE IN SOUTH KOREA
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Heejong Jacob Joo, California State University, Bakersfield
Policing Police Service: Analyses of Public Interest in Recent Policies in South Korea
Seok Beom Kim, Korean National Police Agency / University of Massachusetts - Lowell
Wook Kang, University of Central Oklahoma
Dae-Hoon Kwak, Illinois State University
SeokJin Jeong, University of Texas at Arlington
Sex Offender Registration and Public Notification Requirement: Comparing Sex Offender Laws in South Korea and the United States
Kyungseok Choo, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Donald Rebovich, Utica College
Inmate Visitation and Institutional Misconduct: The Korean Case
Heejong Jacob Joo, California State University, Bakersfield
George Day, East Texas Baptist University
Suhong Min, Kyonggi University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 585: SEX OFFENDERS: HOUSING, SENTENCING, AND PUBLIC POLICIES
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jill Levenson, Lynn University
Sentencing Departures for Sexual Offenders: Enhanced Punishment or Judicial Leniency?
Ryan T. Shields, Florida State University
Sex Offender Residency Restrictions and Recidivism: The Role of Housing Mobility
Jason Rydberg, Michigan State University
Eric Grommon, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Beth M. Huebner, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Timothy Bynum, Michigan State University
Registered Sex Offender Spatial Clustering and Recidivistic Sex Crime Rates
Kelly M. Socia, University of Massachusetts Lowell
274
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Reducing “Stranger Danger”: Examining the Effectiveness of Sex Offender Laws in Decreasing Rates of Stranger-Perpetrated
Victimization
Tasha J. Youstin, Florida Atlantic University
Matt R. Nobles, Sam Houston State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 586: PIMPING AND SEX TRAFFICKING
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ron Weitzer, George Washington University
Pimps of Harlem: Market Strategies and Social Exchange
Amber Horning, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Moral Panic and Market Forces: Value, Price, and Profit in Domestic Adolescent Sex Markets
Anthony Marcus, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Where Are the Victims? A Contrarian Market Perspective on Sex Trafficking
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
Discussant:
Ron Weitzer, George Washington University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 587: TESTING CRIME THEORIES USING COMPARATIVE DATA
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Majone Steketee, Verwey-Jonker Institute, The Netherlands
Juvenile Delinquency and Norm Transmission Strength of Family and School
Dirk Enzmann, Hamburg University
Testing SAT Using Comparative Data
Ekaterina Botchkovar, Northeastern University
Ineke Haen Marshall, Northeastern University
Michael Rocque, Northeastern University
Chad Posick, Northeastern University
Data-Based Alternatives to Theoretical Classification of Countries in Comparative Research: ISRD2 Results
Chris Marshall, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Ineke Haen Marshall, Northeastern University
Tricky Business: Units of Analysis in Comparative Research
Ineke Haen Marshall, Northeastern University
Dirk Enzmann, Hamburg University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 588: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: USING EXPERIMENTATION TO MORE
DEEPLY EXPLORE CRIMINAL JUSTICE ISSUES WITHIN INTERVENTIONS (ORGANIZED BY
THE DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY)
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sue-Ming Yang, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
275
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Examining Disorder Perception: A Look at What’s Inside of the Blackbox
Sue-Ming Yang, National Chung Cheng University, Taiwan
Implementing Randomized Field Trials in an Administrative Context: Tales from the Field
Eileen Ahlin, Westat
Housing an IPV Preventive Intervention Within a Nurse-Home Visitation Program: Overcoming Obstacles in Conducting Field
Experiments
Lynette Feder, University of Central Florida
Jacquelyn Campbell, Johns Hopkins University
Evaluating the Effectiveness of Gender Responsive Delinquency Intervention Programming
Jacob Day, Appalachian State University
Margaret Zahn, North Carolina State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 589: THE COLUMBINE EFFECT: FEAR AND THE EXPANSION OF SCHOOL
ANTIVIOLENCE POLICY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Glenn W. Muschert, Miami University, Ohio
The Columbine Effect
Eric Madfis, University of Washington, Tacoma
Glenn W. Muschert, Miami University, Ohio
The Administration of Zero Tolerance through School Resource Officers
Aviva M. Rich-Shea, Massasoit Community College
James Alan Fox, Northeastern University
Discipline, Race, and School Climate: The Potential for Restoring the School Community
Allison Ann Payne, Villanova University
Kelly Welch, Villanova University
Discussant:
Nicole L. Bracy, University of California, San Diego
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 590: TEACHING ABOUT VICTIMS OF CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Alison Cares, Assumption College
Adding Material about Victims and Victims Issues to Existing Courses: Developing and Disseminating “Modules”
Andrea Leverentz, University of Massachusetts Boston
Incorporating Crime Victimization into Crime Theories Courses: A Comparison of Three Classes
Jennifer C. Gibbs, West Chester University
Teaching Victimization in Freshman English
Susan T. Krumholz, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Nancy Benson, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Best Practices in Teaching About Victimization: Lessons from the OVC-funded National Demonstration Project for Integrating Crime
Victims Issues into University and College Curricula
Alison Cares, Assumption College
Linda M. Williams, University of Massachusetts Lowell
David Hirschel, University of Massachusetts Lowell
276
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 591: IMPROVING POLICE AND AT-RISK YOUTH RELATIONS: FINDINGS FROM THE
TEEN AND POLICE SERVICE (T.A.P.S.) ACADEMY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Everette Penn, University of Houston - Clear Lake
Police and Youth Relations: Perspectives from Youth and the Police
LaDonna Brown, University of Houston - Clear Lake
Reducing the Social Distance between Law Enforcement and At-Risk Youth through the Establishment of the Teen And Police
Service Academy
Everette Penn, University of Houston - Clear Lake
Findings from the Teen And Police Service Academy
Helen Taylor Greene, Texas Southern University
Chenelle A. Jones, Texas Southern University
Discussant:
Chong Min Na, University of Houston - Clear Lake
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 592: SOCIAL PROCESSES IN THE IMMIGRATION-CRIME NEXUS
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Gabriel T. Cesar, Arizona State University
Delinquency of Immigrant Youth: The Effect of Individual and Familial Assimilation
SeungHoon Han, University of Pennsylvania
Immigrant Assimilation and Desistence from Crime: Examining the Effect of Marriage on Offending among U.S. Immigrants
Bianca Bersani, University of Massachusetts Boston
Stephanie Di Pietro, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Immigrant Offending in Stockholm, Sweden: An Event History Analysis
Amber L. Beckley, Stockholm University
Latino Immigration and White, Black, and Latino Inter-Racial Violence: A Community-Level Assessment
Casey Harris, University of Arkansas
Jeff Gruenewald, University of Arkansas
SESSION 593: POLICE DEVIANCE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Matthew Hickman, Seattle University
Applying Theoretical Explanations for Crime to Police Deviance within the New York City Police Department
James F. Albrecht, University of New Haven
Examining the Effects of Pattern or Practice Reform on Police Behavior
Joshua Chanin, San Diego State University
Brittany Sheats, San Diego State University
Noble Cause Corruption and Police Culture: Evidence from a Survey of Police in Ontario
Lisa Hewison, University of Guelph
Julia Christensen Hughes, University of Guelph
Barb Bloemhof, University of Guelph
277
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Lies, Damned Lies, and DOJ "Patterns or Practices"
Matthew Hickman, Seattle University
SESSION 594: PROSECUTION AND SENTENCING OF "SPECIALIZED" OFFENDERS
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Illya Lichtenberg, Mercy College
A Reexamination of Liederbach et al.’s Criminalization of Physician Violence Study, 2001-2011
Danielle McGurrin, Portland State University
Jody Sundt, Portland State University
Alyssa J. Doom, Portland State University
Robert Lockwood, Portland State University
Genocidal Rape and the Prosecution of Sexual Violence in International Criminal Law
Gabrielle A. Ferrales, University of Minnesota
Sarah Lageson, University of Minnesota
Suzy Maves McElrath, University of Minnesota
Sentencing Disparities among Serial Killers: An Examination from 1976 to Present
Laurel A. Mazar, University of Illinois at Chicago
Sex and Panic: Evidence from Sex Offender Sentencing
Jessica Huffman, Old Dominion University
SESSION 595: COMMUNITY, COURTS, AND JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brandon Chase, University of Windsor
Milwaukee Homicide Reviews: Applications of Successful Strategy in Urban Jurisdictions
Nicole Robinson, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Mallory O'Brien, Marquette University
Understanding Cases of Wrongful Conviction
Seri Irazola, ICF International
Samuel R. Gross, University of Michigan - Ann Arbor
Erin Williamson, ICF International
Emily Niedzwiecki, ICF International
Sara Ann Debus-Sherrill, ICF International
Where Injury or Damage is Feared: Peace Bonds as Counter-Law?
Brandon Chase, University of Windsor
SESSION 596: MENTAL HEALTH ISSUES IN JUVENILE JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kristine Artello, Pennsylvania State University, New Kensington
Mental Health and Juvenile Delinquency: Adolescent Predisposition or Psychosis?
Corey R. Carlson, Prairie View A&M University
Camille Gibson, Prairie View A&M University
G. Solomon Osho, Prairie View A&M University
The Rise of the ‘New Asylum’: Reinstitutionalization and the Juvenile Justice System
Danielle M. Shields, Rutgers University
Working with Externalizing and Internalizing Problems in Juvenile Institutional Care: Staff’s Competence and Organizational
Conditions
Lia Ahonen, Orebro University
Jürgen Degner, Orebro University
278
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
All that Glitters isn’t Gold: Bounded Agency within Court-Ordered, Voluntary Children’s Mental Health Organization
Kristine Artello, Pennsylvania State University, New Kensington
SESSION 597: INFLUENCES ON ATTITUDES TOWARD CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Heather Pruss, Indiana University Bloomington
Studying Capital Punishment: Knowledge, Opinions, and Perspectives of Students in a Death Penalty Course
Stacy K. Parker, Muskingum University
Television Crime Content and Support for Capital Punishment
Sarah Britto, Prairie View A&M University
Krystal Noga-Styron, Central Washington University
The Role of Jury/Juror Gender during Capital Deliberations: An Ethnographic Content Analysis
Heather Pruss, Indiana University Bloomington
SESSION 598: THE COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF INCARCERATION I
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Tracy Sohoni, University of Maryland, College Park
Civil Disabilities and Reentry: Inmate Recidivism in Ohio
Katricia Evans, Kent State University at Stark
Deirdre Warren, Kent State University at Stark
Collateral Consequences of Incarceration: Access to a College Education
Natalie Sokoloff, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Felons' Self-Reported Knowledge of Collateral Consequences and the Receipt of Competent Lawyering before Conviction
Velmer S. Burton, Jr., University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
Colleen Fisher, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
Shonda Craft, University of Minnesota - Twin Cities
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Children of Incarcerated Mothers: Assessment of Educational and Behavioral Outcomes
Lynn S. Urban, University of Central Missouri
SESSION 599: JUSTICE AND THE RULE OF LAW IN THE AFRICAN CONTINENT
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nikolaos Theodorakis, University of Cambridge
Electoral Violence: The Case of Ghana
Joseph Appiahene-Gyamfi, University of Texas - Pan American
Sentencing Factors at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
William R. Pruitt, Elmira College
The African Charter in the Context of the Evolving 1940s Human Rights Paradigm
Thomas E. Reed, Eastern Kentucky University
Polina Karpova, Eastern Kentucky University
SESSION 600: DISCOURSE AND CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Erin O'Brien, Queensland University of Technology
Campaign 2012: Growth of White Supremacy Groups via Mainstream Political Discourse
Wendy Lynn Hicks, Loyola University New Orleans
279
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Talk about Sexual Assault Matters: Paradoxical Positions
Kiara Okita, University of Calgary
The Wild West: Experiences of Rural Sex Workers
Alison S. Burke, Southern Oregon University
Legacy, Conspiracy and Pedophilia: An Analysis of Local Coverage of the Penn State Sex Scandal
Elizabeth Mansley, Mount Aloysius College
Erika Frenzel, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
The Public Face of Human Trafficking: Victim Depictions in Policy Discourse and Awareness Campaigns
Erin O'Brien, Queensland University of Technology
SESSION 601: THE IMPACT OF CRIMINAL RECORD ON POST-RELEASE EMPLOYMENT
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Natalie Rose Ortiz, Arizona State University
Erasing the Mark of a Criminal Past
Ericka Briana Adams, San Jose State University
The Effect of Length of Imprisonment on the Labor Market Outcomes of Dutch Ex-Prisoners
Anke Ramakers, University of Leiden, Netherlands
Johan van Wilsem, Leiden University
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Anja Dirkzwager, NSCR
Unemployment and Relationship Tensions Following Men’s Release from Prison
Megan Comfort, RTI International
Kristin Turney, University of California, Irvine
Sara Wakefield, University of California, Irvine
Criminal Stigma, Race, Gender and Employment: An Expanded Assessment of the Consequences of Imprisonment for Employment
Natalie Rose Ortiz, Arizona State University
Scott Decker, Arizona State University
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
SESSION 602: DEATH PENALTY: THEORETICAL AND LEGAL ISSUES
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Valerie West, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Executing the Condemned: Lynching, Carceral Bureaucratization, and Crafted Sentiment
Angie L. Wheaton, Eastern Kentucky University
Kevin I. Minor, Eastern Kentucky University
The Current Implementation of Victim Impact Statements at Capital Sentencing and a Proposal for Reform
Minkyung Kim, Temple University
Alan Harland, Temple University
Support for Capital Punishment in the United States: A Critical Realist Perspective
Gary J. Kowaluk, Cameron University
Capital Sentencing and Its Decline
Valerie West, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 603: THE METHODOLOGY OF SURVEY RESEARCH ON CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Karise Marise Carrillo, University at Albany, SUNY
280
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Conducting Social Research through Amazon.com’s Mechanical Turk: The Viability of Crowdsourcing as a Survey Methodology
Joseph Gustafson, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Good Intentions: Understanding How Scenario Realism Affects Responses in Vignette Surveys
Melissa Rorie, University of Maryland, College Park
Using College Students to Examine Perceptions of the Police: Convenient, But Are They Representative?
Nicholas Jones, University of Regina
Rick Ruddell, University of Regina
Using Internet for Crime Victimization Survey: The Case of Property Crimes in Japan
Masahiro Tsushima, Ryukoku University
Koichi Hamai, Ryukoku University
SESSION 604: RACE, ETHNICITY AND CRIME/DELINQUENCY THEORY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew Grindal, University of California, Riverside
Examining the Impact of Under-Researched Social Strains on Adolescent Substance Use
Jennifer Steele, Walsh University
General Strain Theory and Collegiate Drinking Patterns among African American Female Students
Isis N. Walton, Virginia State University
B. Cherie Dawson-Edwards, University of Louisville
George Higgins, University of Louisville
Testing the Ethnic and Racial Generality of Self-Control Theory
Amy S. Eggers, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
The Effect of Ethnic-Racial Socialization on Substance Use: An Application of Social Learning Theory
Matthew Grindal, University of California, Riverside
SESSION 605: ADDRESSING THE NEEDS OF DOMESTIC VIOLENCE VICTIMS: SERVICE USE
AND PREVENTION
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Karl Roberts, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Social, Coercive Control, and Situational Contexts of Oklahoma Women’s Service Use for Partner Abuse
Lorraine Halinka Malcoe, Simon Fraser University
E. Ann Carson, Bureau of Justice Statistics, USDOJ
Sheryll J. Brown, Oklahoma State Department of Health
“I Wish the Hitting Would Stop”: An Assessment of a Domestic Violence Education Program for Elementary Students
Thorvald Dahle, North Dakota State University
Carol A. Archbold, North Dakota State University
Development of Stalking Risk Identification Tools for Law Enforcement
Karl Roberts, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Lorraine Sheridan, Edith Cowan University, Perth Australia
SESSION 606: PREDICTORS OF TERRORIST VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Michael Alan Hollingsworth, Old Dominion University
Patterns of Terrorism in Turkey: Geopolitical Explanations for a Half-Century of Terrorism
Abdullah Cihan, Sam Houston State University
Mitchel P. Roth, Sam Houston State University
281
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Causes of Terrorism in the Arab World
Ahmad Falah Alomosh, University of Sharjah
Illicit Firearms, Religious Fundamentalism, and New Terrorism: The Nigerian Example
Emmanuel Onyeozili, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore
Failed States, Destabilization, and Trajectories of Terrorism: A Multi-Regional Study
Michael Alan Hollingsworth, Old Dominion University
SESSION 607: VIRTUAL PLACES AND PHYSICAL PLACES OF CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Thomas Stucky, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
“Please Refrain from Locking your Bags”: Employee Theft from Passengers at U.S. Airports
Nerea Marteache, Rutgers University
Crime Habitats of Street Robbery: Place, Space and Social Attributes
William R. Smith, North Carolina State University
Nick Richardson, North Carolina State University
Bus Stops and Crime
Thomas Stucky, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
William Newby, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
Stalking Victimisation and the Situational Perspective
Nicola Cheyne, Griffith University
Anna Stewart, Griffith University
Susan Dennison, Griffith University
SESSION 608: IMPORTANT ISSUES IN PRISONER REENTRY
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Laurin Parker, University of Delaware
Defining Success in the Post-Prison Panopticon
John Montgomery, Northeastern University
Douglas Thompkins, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Doing Re-entry: Accounts of Post-Prison Success
Heather Hlavka, Marquette University
Darren Wheelock, Marquette University
Richard S. Jones, Marquette University
Socialization, Identity, and Self: The Management of Ex-Convict Experiences
Mark Pogrebin, University of Colorado - Denver
Youth Perspectives on Reentry Programming
Laurin Parker, University of Delaware
SESSION 609: ROUNDTABLE: FAMILY DINNERS, VICTIMIZATION, AND SUICIDAL IDEATION
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
The Context of Family Dinners
Gary Hopkins, Andrews University
Kathryn Conopio, Andrews University
Family Dinners and Victimization
Duane McBride, Andrews University
Jerome Thayer, Andrews University
Alina Baltazar, Andrews University
Romulus Chelbegean, Andrews University
282
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Family Dinners and Suicidal Ideation
Lionel Matthews, Andrews University
Matthew Green, Andrews University
Carlos Perrone, Andrews University
SESSION 610: ROUNDTABLE: FIELD WORKER AND INFORMANT NETWORKING
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Victoria Time, Old Dominion University
Peter Liu, Monmouth University
Delbert Rounds, Edinboro University
Brandon T. Stroup, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Timothy Austin, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 611: ROUNDTABLE: SUPPORT FOR A LEARNING COMMUNITY IN CRIMINAL
JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Douglas Andrew Baals, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Support for a Learning Community in CJ
Douglas Andrew Baals, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Discussant:
Charisse T.M. Coston, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
SESSION 612: ROUNDTABLE: NEO-MARXIAN AND NEO-FOUCALDIAN APPROACHES TO
LONG-TERM TRENDS IN THE PRISON POPULATION: BUSINESS CYCLES, FORMULAS OF
GOVERNMENT, AND CITIZENSHIP
Friday, November 16 - 8:00 am to 9:20 am
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Fabienne Brion, Université Catholique de Louvain - Belgium
Dario Melossi, University of Bologna
Salvatore Palidda, Universita' degli Studi di Genova
Charlotte Vanneste, National Institute of Criminalistics and Criminology, Belgium
SESSION 613: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: ACADEMIC VERSUS NON-ACADEMIC
CAREERS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Matt Vogel, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Discussants:
Christy Visher, University of Delaware
James Lynch, Bureau of Justice Statistics
Angela Moore, National Institute of Justice
Jill Farrell, University of Maryland
Marc Mauer, The Sentencing Project
283
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 614: RELIGION, CULTURE, AND MORALITY: TOWARD UNDERSTANDING VALUES
AND THEIR PRESENTATION IN MEDIA
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Lloyd Klein, St. Francis College
Assessing Opinions on Emerging Social Issues among Devout Christians in the United States
Will Anderson, Rutgers University
Antony Leberatto, Rutgers University
State Lawmaking in the Reconfigured Culture War: Implementing the "Redness" and the "Blueness"
John Dombrink, University of California, Irvine
An Exploration of Religious Terrorism Over Time : A Content Analysis of the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal
Heather Marie Zurburg, Florida State University
Amy Reckdenwald, University of Central Florida
The Social Construction and Emergence of Heterosexist Criminal and Civil Laws
Jenna Renee Spannbauer, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 615: NATIONAL INCIDENT BASED REPORTING SYSTEM
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Geographic Relationship between Foreclosures and White Collar Crime Using State IBR data
Cynthia Barnett-Ryan, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Using NIBRS to Dissect Larceny, Fraud, and Forgery Arrests with Focus on Gender: Conventional or Occupational (White-Collar)
Offenders?
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Casey Harris, University of Arkansas
Noah Painter-Davis, Pennsylvania State University
Recent Immigration Flows and Violent Crime: Effects by Destination Type and Race/Ethnicity
Noah Painter-Davis, Pennsylvania State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 616: MEDIA, CRIME AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Danielle Soulliere, University of Windsor
The Lessons of Oz: Critiquing the American Penal System
Danielle Soulliere, University of Windsor
The Rise of Indoor Prostitution: Rethinking the Policing and Policy Practices of Prostitution
Meghan Fraser, University of Windsor
A Cultural Criminological Approach to Understanding Heavy Metal Music and its Association with Criminal Behaviour in Popular
Media
Aaron Doey, University of Windsor
Social Activism Through Social Media: The Case of Child Soldiering in the Global Context
Mary Girges, University of Windsor
284
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 617: PERPETRATOR-MOTIVE RESEARCH DESIGN: PILOT PROJECT WITH
CONVICTED KIDNAPPERS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jeff Daniels, West Virginia University
Overview of Perpetrator-Motive Research Design
Vincent Van Hasselt, Nova Southeastern University
Gregory Vecchi, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Hostage-Taker Motives: Initial Pilot Study
Amy Angleman, FBI Behavioral Science Unit
Hostage-Taker Motives: Initial Pilot Study Results
Jeff Daniels, West Virginia University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 618: THE AMERICAN PRISON: IMAGINING A DIFFERENT FUTURE I
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mary Katherine Stohr, Missouri State University
The Faith-Based Prison
Byron R. Johnson, Baylor University
The Feminist Prison
Kristi Holsinger, University of Missouri - Kansas City
The Racially Just Prison
Craig Hemmens, Missouri State University
The Green Prison
Mary Katherine Stohr, Missouri State University
John F. Wozniak, Western Illinois University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 619: CELEBRATING THE LEGACY OF RUTH KORNHAUSER: PERSONAL AND
PROFESSIONAL REFLECTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chairs:
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
Ruth Rosner Kornhauser: A Personal and Intellectual History
Anne Kornhauser, City University of New York
Challenging Social Disorganization Theory
Robert Bursik, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Challenging Cultural Deviance Theory
Ross Matsueda, University of Washington
285
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 620: THE IMPACT OF INSTITUTIONAL CULTURE AND THE INCARCERATION
EXPERIENCE ON THE REENTRY PROCESS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Talia Sandwick, Vera Institute of Justice
The Impact of Jail's Formal and Informal Systems of Control on Jail Reentry
Talia Sandwick, Vera Institute of Justice
Cesar Arauz-Cuadra, Vera Institute of Justice
Jim Parsons, Vera Institute of Justice
The Implications of Correctional Staff Attitudes and Beliefs towards Families on the Reentry Process
Sandra Villalobos Agudelo, Vera Institute of Justice
Incarceration and Reentry: A Youth Perspective
Jennifer L. Jensen, Vera Institute of Justice / Rutgers University
Discussant:
Michael Jacobson, Vera Institute of Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 621: CRIMINAL CAREERS AND INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION OF SEX
OFFENDERS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Miriam Wijkman, VU University Amsterdam
Career Initiation, Detection Avoidance and the Spillover Effect Across Crime Types
Jeff Mathesius, Simon Fraser University
Patrick Lussier, Universite Laval
Life Course Transitions and Desistance in Sex Offenders: An Event History Analysis
Arjan Blokland, NSCR
Victor van der Geest, VU University Amsterdam
The Concentration of Sex Offenses within British and Dutch Families
Steve van de Weijer, VU University Amsterdam
Sytske Besemer, University of Cambridge, UK
Catrien Bijleveld, NSCR
Arjan Blokland, NSCR
Trajectories and Predictors of Female Sexual Offending
Miriam Wijkman, VU University Amsterdam
Catrien Bijleveld, NSCR
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 622: NEUROCRIMINOLOGY: A BOHEMIAN RHAPSODY
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Brain Mechanisms and the Responsible Mind: The Curious Case of Mr. Oft
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
286
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Biological Research on Antisocial Behavior and Its Implications for the Law
Andrea Glenn, Institute of Mental Health, Singapore
Biomedical Treatment of Offenders: A Neuroethical Perspective
Farah Focquaert, Ghent University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 623: METHODS AND FINDINGS OF THE WHAT WORKS IN REENTRY
CLEARINGHOUSE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Hannah Dodd, The Urban Institute
Synthesizing Reentry Research: Development and Methodology of the What Works in Reentry Website
Hannah Dodd, The Urban Institute
Employment-Focused Interventions for Those Returning from Incarceration: What Works?
Justin Breaux, The Urban Institute
Mental Health and Cognitive-Based Interventions for the Reentry Population
Andrea Matthews, The Urban Institute
What Works in Improving Reentry Outcomes for Substance Abusers
Dwight Pope, The Urban Institute
Discussant:
Nancy La Vigne, The Urban Institute
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 624: CRIME AND PLACE: PUBLIC AND RESIDENTIAL PLACES IN CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Eric S. McCord, University of Louisville
A Tale of Two Cities: Neighborhood Parks and Crime in Philadelphia, PA and Louisville, KY
Eric S. McCord, University of Louisville
William Cameron Stelzig, University of Louisville
Crime and Disorder in Urban Parks
Sondra Marie Tower, Temple University
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
Crime in the Necropolis: Lessons about Crime from Places of the Dead
Amy Stutzenberger, University of Cincinnati
John Eck, University of Cincinnati
Gated Communities and Risk of Burglary Victimization
Gregory D. Breetzke, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
Ellen G. Cohn, Florida International University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 625: ROADS DIVERGE: PATTERNS OF DESISTANCE FOR A DRUG INVOLVED
CRIMINAL COHORT
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Ronet Bachman, University of Delaware
287
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Testing an Identity Theory of Desistance: The Long and Winding Road to a Drug and Crime Free Life
Ronet Bachman, University of Delaware
Raymond Paternoster, University of Maryland
When Desistence Isn’t Desistence: Low-Level Offending and Self-Harm Reduction
Steve Martin, University of Delaware
Daniel O'Connell, University of Delaware
Second-Chance Grandparenting: How an (Un)Conventional Role May Impact the Desistance Process
Erin M. Kerrison, University of Delaware
The Impact of Changes in Illicit Drug Markets on Drug Use and Criminal Activity Desistance
Lionel Smith, University of Delaware
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 626: RED HOOK COMMUNITY JUSTICE CENTER: PROCESS, ETHNOGRAPHIC, AND
IMPACT ANALYSES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Fred Louis Cheesman, National Center for State Courts
Do Community Courts Change Outcomes and Reduce Recidivism? Results for Adult Criminal and Juvenile Delinquency Cases at the
Red Hook Community Justice Center
Suvi Hynynen, Center for Court Innovation
Findings from an Ethnographic Analysis of Resident and Offender Perceptions of the Red Hook Community Justice Center
Ric Curtis, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
What Makes Community Courts Effective? Findings from a Process Evaluation of the Red Hook Community Justice Center
Cynthia G. Lee, National Center for State Courts
David Rottman, National Center for State Courts
Does Processing by the Red Hook Community Justice Center Influence the Probability of Recidivism Relative to the Business-AsUsual Alternative? Answers from Survival Analysis
Fred Louis Cheesman, National Center for State Courts
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 627: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN CORPORATE SECURITY
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Randy K. Lippert, University of Windsor
Multiplicities of Corporate Security: Understanding Emerging Trends and Challenges
Kevin Walby, University of Victoria
Randy K. Lippert, University of Windsor
The Private Management of National Security: A Comparative Study of American, British, Swedish and Danish Companies
Karen Lund Petersen, University of Copenhagen
Managing Risks and Regulating Student Life on Canadian University Campuses
Blair Wilkinson, University of Victoria
Discussant:
Justin Piche, University of Ottawa
MEETING
288
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 628: CMC BOARD MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 629: CARIBBEAN CRIME STUDY GROUP MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 630: HOMICIDE STUDIES EDITORIAL BOARD MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 631: ASC 2013 PROGRAM COMMITTEE MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 632: GANGS IN AMERICA'S COMMUNITIES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
C. Ronald Huff, University of California, Irvine
Author
James C. ("Buddy") Howell, National Gang Center / Institute for Intergovernmental Research
Critics
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
Dana Peterson, University at Albany, SUNY
David C. Pyrooz, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 633: INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jessamyn Tracy, National Center for Victims of Crime
Using Victimization Data to Estimate Childhood Exposure to Intimate Partner Violence
Catherine Kaukinen, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs
Ráchael Powers, University of South Florida
Silke Meyer, University of Queensland
Women's Emotional and Cognitive Appraisal of Intimate versus Nonintimate Sexual Victimization
Veronique Jaquier, Yale University
Tami P. Sullivan, Yale University
Staying with the Perpetrator: Differences between Heterosexual and Same Sex Victims
Jennifer E. Loveland, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Chitra Raghavan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Resistance to Violence: Differences between Heterosexual, Gay and Lesbian Victims of Intimate Partner Violence
Larissa Barbaro, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Chitra Raghavan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Making Sense of Stalking Data and Trends in the United States
Jessamyn Tracy, National Center for Victims of Crime
289
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 634: POLICE LEGITIMACY AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Richard R. Bennett, American University
Are Perceived Procedural Justice and Police Effectiveness in Crime Control Judgments Linked?
Brian Wyant, LaSalle University
Ralph Taylor, Temple University
Brian Lockwood, Monmouth University
The Effects of Community Cohesion and Empowerment on Police Legitimacy
Richard R. Bennett, American University
Melissa S. Morabito, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Anthony D. Harriott, University of West Indies, Mona Campus
Correlates of Trust in the Police among College Students
Heeuk Dennis Lee, Washington State University
Francis Danso Boateng, Washington State University
Keeping the Peace: Social Identity, Procedural Justice and the Policing of Soccer Crowds
James Alec Hoggett, University of the West of England
SESSION 635: PREDICTORS OF CASE OUTCOMES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Matthew C. Leone, University of Nevada
Accessing Geopolitical Factors on Federal Terrorism Case Outcomes
Christopher A. Shields, University of Arkansas
Paxton Roberts, University of Arkansas
Effects of Defendants’ Facial Attractiveness on Sentencing Decisions in State Court
Angela Reitler, University of Cincinnati
Jamie Newsome, University of Texas at San Antonio
The Curious Operation of 'Programs' in Misdemeanor Punishment
Issa Kohler-Hausmann, New York University
Strain and Sentencing: The Effect of Relative Strain on Sentences Received in Nevada in 2007
Matthew C. Leone, University of Nevada
Victoria A. Springer, University of Nevada
Janice R. Russell, University of Nevada
James T. Richardson, University of Nevada
SESSION 636: CHARGING AND PLEA BARGAINING DECISIONS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sheila Royo Maxwell, Michigan State University
Charging Decisions and Plea Bargaining: A Glimpse of the Process
Lauren O'Neill Shermer, Widener University
Plea Bargaining in the Shadow of the Indictment
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
Robert J. Norris, University at Albany, SUNY
Plea Bargaining, Local Legal Culture, and Courtroom Workgroups: Reassessing the Literature and Building a New Research Agenda
for Criminal Courts
Michael C. Gizzi, Illinois State University
Meagan Semmelroth, Illinois State University
Ethan D. Boldt, Illinois State University
290
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Role of Gender in Juvenile and Young Adult Plea Bargain Decision-Making
Reveka Shteynberg, University at Albany, SUNY
D. Catherine Walker, University at Albany, SUNY
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 637: HEALTH ISSUES AMONG ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG ADULTS: IMPLICATIONS
FOR DEVIANCE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Rose Cruze, Georgia State University
Theories of Collegiate Suicides: Relationships to Health and Crime
John McBrayer, University of Alabama
Adolescent Sex and Delinquency: The Birds and the Bees, Deviance, and Your Teens
Alexis Jane Harper, University of Texas at Dallas
Empirical Testing of Diet on Violence Using Add Health Data
Ivan Gregory Birch, University of Texas at Dallas
Bullying Typologies: Are there Different Pathways that Lead Children into Bullying Behaviors?
Jennifer Rose Cruze, Georgia State University
Brenda Sims Blackwell, Georgia State University
SESSION 638: MACRO-LEVEL STUDIES OF THE EFFECTS OF INCARCERATION
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Samuel Joseph Scaggs, Florida State University
County-Level Imprisonment Patterns and Their Macro-Level Crime-Control Effects
Paul R. Schupp, Niagara University
Craig Rivera, Niagara University
Graying through the Years: The Impact of Florida's Determinate Sentencing on the Proportion of Older Adult Inmates
Samuel Joseph Scaggs, Florida State University
SESSION 639: SEXUAL ASSAULT VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, University of Central Florida
Forensic Evidence in Sexual Assault Cases
Megan Alderden, Saint Xavier University
Theodore P. Cross, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Alexander Wagner, Fisher College
Daniel Bibel, Massachusetts State Police
Marjorie Bernardeau, Boston Police Department
Lisa Sampson, MA Executive Office of Public Safety and Security
Injurious Encounters: Assessing the Impact of Weapons on Sexual Assault Injury Severity
Janne E. Gaub, Arizona State University
Sexual Victimization among College Students in a Rural Setting: An Extension of Lifestyle Routine Activities Theory
Jillian Grace Shafer, Central Washington University
Cody J. Stoddard, Central Washington University
Differences in Sexual assault Help-Seeking Behaviors among Heterosexual and Non-Heterosexual College Students
Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, University of Central Florida
Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida
291
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 640: LEGAL AND ETHICAL ISSUES IN INSTITUTIONAL CORRECTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robert Worley, Texas A&M University - Central Texas
From Prison Sentence to Deprivation of Liberty
Eric M.G. Maes, National Institute of Criminalistics and Criminology
Offender Grooming Policies in U.S. Prison Systems
Brenda Riley, Sam Houston State University
Solitary Confinement and Its Monitoring
Leslie Sebba, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
Rachela Erel, Academic Center of Law and Business, Ramat Gan
The Pandora's Box of the Modern Day Penitentiary: Utilization of Inmate Informants
Robert Worley, Texas A&M University - Central Texas
Vidisha Worley, University of North Texas at Dallas
SESSION 641: PARENTING PROCESSES AND OFFSPRING OFFENDING ACROSS THE LIFE
COURSE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Matthew D. Fetzer, Shippensburg University
Parenting, Child Disclosure, and Delinquency: A Structural Equation Panel Model
Maria Sergeevna Grigoryeva, University of Washington
Quantity or Quality? The Interconnections among Household Structure, Parent-Child Relationships, and Juvenile Delinquency
Shannon K. Jacobsen, George Mason University
Parental Regulation and Delinquency in a Sample of African Americans: A Trajectory Analysis
Matthew D. Fetzer, Shippensburg University
Melissa Ricketts, Shippensburg University
George Higgins, University of Louisville
SESSION 642: METHODOLOGICAL STRATEGIES FOR INVESTIGATING NEIGHBORHOOD
EFFECTS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Homicide as Infectious Disease: Using Public Health Methods
Jesenia Pizarro, Michigan State University
April M. Zeoli, Michigan State University
Chris Melde, Michigan State University
Sue Grady, Michigan State University
The Measurement of Small Place Correlates of Crime
Andrew Palmer Wheeler, University at Albany, SUNY
Racial Heterogeneity, Crime, and Disorder: An Exploration of Measurement and Methodology using a Case Study of Philadelphia
Neighborhoods
Jeanee C. Miller, University at Albany, SUNY
Transitory Mobility, Cultural Heterogeneity, and Victimization Risk
Marie Rosenkrantz Lindegaard, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Danielle M. Reynald, Griffith University
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
292
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 643: RISK-NEEDS-RESPONSIVITY IN COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer L. Lanterman, University of Nevada, Reno
Beyond Risk-Needs-Responsivity: New Directions in Community Supervision
James Byrne, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
April Pattavina, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Do Indicators of Childhood Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder and Conduct Disorder Influence Treatment Engagement and
Retention in a Modified Therapeutic Community?
Liana Taylor, Temple University
Matthew Hiller, Temple University
Parole Reform in California: Impact on Recidivism
Helen Braithwaite, University of California, Irvine
Susan Turner, University of California, Irvine
Lauren Kearney, University of California, Irvine
Risk, Need, and Responsivity: Incorporating Virtual Reality into Treatment
Bobbie Ticknor, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 644: RESTORATIVE JUSTICE AND PUNISHMENT
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
David L. Myers, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
A Multivariate Analysis of Perceptions of Balanced and Restorative Justice (BARJ) in Pennsylvania
David L. Myers, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
EmmaLeigh Kirchner, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Dennis Giever, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Daniel R. Lee, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Jay Gilliam, University of Illinois Springfield
Against Juror Oaths: A Jury Activist Examines a Longstanding Pernicious Practice
Roger Isaac Roots, Fair Procedure Initiative
Sulh and Musalaha: Islamic Reconciliatory Practices and the Arab Spring
Nabil Ouassini, Indiana University Bloomington
SESSION 645: TRANSFORMING SYSTEMS, TRANSFORMING LIVES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Anne Nurse, The College of Wooster
The Good Lives Model: New Directions for Preventative Practice with Children?
Lucy Wainwright, University of Portsmouth
Claire Nee, University of Portsmouth, UK
Restoring Justice: Preliminary Results from a Restorative Community Group Conferencing Program
Timothy J. Holler, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Teenage Fatherhood as a Potential Turning Point in the Lives of Delinquent Youth
Monica Landers, University of South Florida
Ojmarrh F. Mitchell, University of South Florida
Towards a Strength-Based Juvenile Correctional Facility: Sustainability and Effects of an Institutional Transformation
William Barton, Indiana University
Juliette Mackin, NPC Research
293
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 646: RELIGION AND CRIME/DELINQUENCY
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Aaron B. Franzen, Baylor University
Atheism and Crime
Ryan David Schroeder, University of Louisville
Christopher Bradley, Indiana University-Purdue University, Fort Wayne
Richard Parker, University of Louisville
Imprudent, Immoral, Irked, or Isolated? Exploring the Generality and Nature of the Religiosity-Crime Association
Jonathan R. Brauer, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Charles R. Tittle, North Carolina State University
Olena Antonaccio, University of Miami
Religion's Institutional and Denominational Influences on Lethal Violence
Bryan K. Robinson, University at Albany, SUNY / Russell Sage College
The Contribution of Religion to Institutional Anomie Theory
Allen Shamow, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Is Being “Spiritual” Enough without Being Religious? A Study of Violent and Property Crimes among Emerging Adults
Aaron B. Franzen, Baylor University
Sung Joon Jang, Baylor University
SESSION 647: SEXUAL ASSAULT AND COLLEGE STUDENTS: EXPERIENCES AND ATTITUDES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Oliver Kaplan, San Diego State University
Is Rape Acceptable? A Vignette Study
Lynn Pazzani, Delta State University
The Relationship between Risky Behaviors, Individual Characteristics, and Sexual Revictimization among College Women
Sadie J. Mummert, Georgia State University
Leah Daigle, Georgia State University
Understanding the Relationship between Rape Resistance and Acknowledgment
Kaitlin M. Boyle, University of Georgia
Jody Clay-Warner, University of Georgia
“Just Call the Cops”: College Students' Advice to the Rape Victim
Yumi Suzuki, University of South Dakota
SESSION 648: NON-STATE RESPONSES TO CORPORATE CRIME AND INJUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
David O. Friedrichs, University of Scranton
Cyber-Posses, Virtual Mobs, and Lone Wolves: A Typology of Individuals And Groups Who Participate In "Justice-Oriented"
Activities Online
Laura Huey, University of Western Ontario
Johnny Nhan, Texas Christian University
Examining the Far-Right Tax Protest Movement: A Case Study of We the People
Brandon Sullivan, Michigan State University
Joshua Freilich, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Steven Chermak, Michigan State University
Occupy the Political Economy: An Exercise in Public Criminology
David O. Friedrichs, University of Scranton
294
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 649: CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON GANGS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Wendy Fitzgibbon, London Metropolitan University
Crowns and Crimes: The Moral Complexity of Latin King Life
Kevin Moran, Graduate Center CUNY
Exploring Causal Factors in the Manifestation of Inter-Minority Gang Conflict in Los Angeles
Robert Donald Weide, New York University
Interactionist Labeling: Formal and Informal Labeling’s Effects on Juvenile Delinquency
Daniel Ryan Kavish, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
The Role of the Family in Facilitating Gang Membership, Criminality and Exit
Wendy Fitzgibbon, London Metropolitan University
Tara Young, London Metropolitan University
SESSION 650: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES AFFECTING CROSS-NATIONAL RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Gohar A. Petrossian, William Paterson University
A Tale of Two Second Cities: Gangs and Global Exchange in Glasgow and Chicago
Alistair Fraser, University of Hong Kong
John Hagedorn, University of Illinois at Chicago
Self-Report Studies in Western and Eastern European and Asian countries: Challenges of Comparative Methodology
Anastasiya Lukash, Zurich University, Switzerland
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
The Operationalization of Anomie in a Cross-National Comparison of Homicide Rates
Catrin Andersson, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
Lila Kazemian, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Using GIS to Understand the Global Hot- and Cold-Spots of Illegal Wildlife Trafficking
Gohar A. Petrossian, William Paterson University
SESSION 651: QUALITATIVE EXPLORATIONS OF YOUTH, CRIME AND COMMUNITY
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Arthur Gregory Vasquez, University of Texas at Dallas
The Effects of Gentrification on Crime and Youth Gang Membership: A Case Study of Asbury Park, NJ
Alicia Raia, Rutgers University
The Narrative Normalization of Violence in Street Life
Heith Copes, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Andy Hochstetler, Iowa State University
Michael Cherbonneau, University of Texas at Dallas
“They Won’t Allow It”: Young Men’s Struggles to Negotiate Criminal Justice Obligations and Employment
Laura J. Napolitano, Chapin Hall at the University of Chicago
"Getting Up": Street Taggers' Use of Neutralization Techniques
Arthur Gregory Vasquez, University of Texas at Dallas
SESSION 652: PUBLIC WELFARE AND POLICY ISSUES RELATED TO FEMALE DEVIANCE AND
VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kylie Parrotta, Delaware State University
295
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Invisible Women Speak Up: An Ethnographic Study of Homeless Women
Helena Menih, Griffith University
Practice of Feticide: Formal Remedial Measures for Population Preservation
Prit Paul Kaur, Auburn University at Montgomery
Theresa Pelfrey, Auburn University at Montgomery
A GIS-Based Approach to Quantifying Healthcare Costs for Domestic Violence Patients
Daniel Pacheco, University of Texas at Dallas
SESSION 653: METHODOLOGICAL ADVANCES IN DELINQUENCY RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brent Teasdale, Georgia State University
Examining the Latent Class Structure of Delinquency across Informants
Joan A. Reid, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Institutional Friendship: Predicting Egocentric Networks of Incarcerated Youth
Shannon Elizabeth Reid, University of California, Irvine
The Roles of School-Level and Neighborhood-Level Characteristics in Explaining Delinquency and Involvement with the Criminal
Justice System: A Cross-Classified Multilevel Analysis
Tia Stevens, Michigan State University
Merry Morash, Michigan State University
Early Onset Deviance: Diathesis-Stress Modeled as a Logistic Regression Series and a Fuzzy Cognitive Map
Hilary Kim Morden, Simon Fraser University
SESSION 654: ROUNDTABLE: DRUG COURTS REDUX: A LOOK BACK TO THE FUTURE OF
DRUG COURT RESEARCH AND ADMINISTRATION
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Steven Belenko, Temple University
Benjamin Gibbs, University of Central Missouri
Jacqueline Gay van Wormer, Washington State University
William Wakefield, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Paul Yakel, Douglas County (Nebraska) Adult Drug Court
SESSION 655: ROUNDTABLE: JOSEPH ALBINI AND JEFFREY MCILLWAIN'S REFLECTIONS ON
ORGANIZED CRIME - PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Frank Hagan, Mercyhurst University
Discussants:
Joseph Albini, Wayne State University
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
James Finckenauer, Rutgers University
SESSION 656: ROUNDTABLE: ENGAGING THE ACADEMICS: AN INTERDISCIPLINARY
APPROACH TOWARD AN UNDERSTANDING OF “CONTINUITY, CHANGE, AND THE CULTURE
OF FEAR”
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Helen Taylor Greene, Texas Southern University
296
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Discussants:
Byron E. Price, Texas Southern University
Michael O. Adams, Texas Southern University
Sheri Smith, Texas Southern University
SESSION 657: ROUNDTABLE: INTERVIEWS WITH GLOBAL LEADERS IN POLICING, COURTS,
AND PRISONS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Dilip K. Das, International Police Executive Symposium
Discussants:
John Eterno, Police Practice & Research: An International Journal
Cliff Roberson, Police Practice & Research: An International Journal
Eileen Ahlin, Westat
George Lombardi, Missouri Department of Corrections
SESSION 658: ROUNDTABLE: MAKING SENSE OF ADOLESCENT TO PARENT VIOLENCE:
INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Rachel Condry, University of Oxford
Jessie L. Krienert, Illinois State University
Jeffrey A. Walsh, Illinois State University
Heather Nancarrow, Queensland Centre for Domestic and Family Violence Research
Gregory Routt, Step Up Program, King County, Superior Court, Seattle
Lily Anderson, Step Up Program, King County, Superior Court, Seattle
SESSION 659: SEXED AND GENDERED PATHWAYS TO OFFENDING AND RECIDIVISM
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Erin Denton, McGill University
Co-Occurring Risk Factors for Male Offenders: Results from Exploratory Research
Valerie Bell, Loras College
Patricia Van Voorhis, University of Cincinnati
Krista Gehring, University of Houston - Downtown
Understanding Female Offender Typologies
Rachel Brushett, University of Cincinnati
Sex, Gender, and Crime
Matthew Dolliver, Northeastern University
Navigating Risk: The Impact of Neighborhood Effects on Female Adolescent Sexual and Substance Use Behaviors
Stacia Gilliard-Matthews, Rutgers University
Robin Stevens, Rutgers University
SESSION 660: TEACHING RESEARCH METHODS AND STATISTICS
Friday, November 16 - 9:30 am to 10:50 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
"Peeragogy" in Action: Utilizing Applied Research in the Classroom
Jonathan Felden, Eastern Kentucky University
Ethan Higgins, Eastern Kentucky University
Polina Karpova, Eastern Kentucky University
Rebecca P. Moran, Eastern Kentucky University
297
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Bethany Rayburn, Eastern Kentucky University
Cassandra Tate, Eastern Kentucky University
Angie L. Wheaton, Eastern Kentucky University
Pamela Woody, Eastern Kentucky University
James B. Wells, Eastern Kentucky University
Deconstructing Drama in Criminology Statistics Classes
Stephen E. Brown, Western Carolina University
Albert M. Kopak, Western Carolina University
Jamie Vaske, Western Carolina University
Teaching Criminal Justice Students Research Skills through an Examination of Scholarly Literature on Occupational Burnout
Tim Bower, Keuka College
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 661: MISCARRIAGES OF JUSTICE: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY AND
WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Shari R. Berkowitz, Roosevelt University
Social Influence as a Theoretical Framework for Wrongful Conviction Research
Megan R. Kienzle, University of Florida
Lora M. Levett, University of Florida
Using Social Psychology to Explain Racial Disparities in False Confession Rates
Cynthia J. Najdowski, University at Albany, SUNY
Bette L. Bottoms, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Legal Implications of Mistaken Memories
Shari R. Berkowitz, Roosevelt University
Discussant:
Allison D. Redlich, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 662: WORKING THE JOINT: ISSUES INVOLVING CORRECTIONAL STAFF
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kevin I. Minor, Eastern Kentucky University
A Career and Life Stage Analysis of Correctional Staff Outcomes
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
Nancy L. Hogan, Ferris State University
Brett Garland, Missouri State University
Marie L. Griffin, Arizona State University
Kelly Cheeseman, Messiah College
An Experimental Design Comparing the Effectiveness of Web-Based Classroom Training on Learning Transfer among Juvenile
Corrections Staff
James B. Wells, Eastern Kentucky University
Kevin I. Minor, Eastern Kentucky University
J. Stephen Parson, Commonwealth Research Consulting, Inc.
Chris Innes, National Institute of Corrections
298
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
A Gendered Model of Job Stress and Job Satisfaction among Jail Staff: A Preliminary Study
Eugene A. Paoline, University of Central Florida
Nancy L. Hogan, Ferris State University
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
Predicting Job Morale among Staff in Juvenile Corrections
Kevin I. Minor, Eastern Kentucky University
James B. Wells, Eastern Kentucky University
Eric Lambert, Wayne State University
Peggy S. Keller, University of Kentucky
Discussant:
Nancy L. Hogan, Ferris State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 663: THE 40TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE CRIMINALIZATION HYPOTHESIS:
REFLECTIONS ON CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND MENTAL ILLNESS INTERFACE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Arthur Lurigio, Loyola University Chicago
Political and Research Impacts of “The Criminalization of Mentally Disordered Behavior”
Virginia Aldige Hiday, North Carolina State University
Psychiatric Disorders in Detained Youth: Implications for the Criminalization Hypothesis
Linda Teplin, Northwestern University
Reducing Criminalization by Addressing High-Risk Persons with Serious Mental Illness
H. Richard Lamb, University of Southern California
Historical and Current Perspectives on the Criminalization Hypothesis
Marc F. Abramson, Private Practice: Psychiatry
Discussant:
Arthur Lurigio, Loyola University Chicago
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 664: PRISON COMMUNITY LEARNING EXPERIENCES OF UNDERGRADUATE
STUDENTS: INSIDE-OUT PRISON EXCHANGE AND ALTERNATIVES TO VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jo-Ann Della Giustina, Bridgewater State University
Cognitive Transformations through Experiential Learning behind the Walls
Jo-Ann Della Giustina, Bridgewater State University
Building Bridges Between University Students and Incarcerated Men
Oscar Guerrero, Bridgewater State University
Marilyn Nieves, Bridgewater State University
Finding Enlightenment in A Prison Classroom
Jennifer DeMichele, Bridgewater State University
Finding My Voice in the Prison: My Experiences with the Alternatives to Violence Project
Aimee Meier, Bridgewater State University
299
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 665: PRETRIAL RISK ASSESSMENT: STATUS, ISSUES, AND OPPORTUNITIES FOR
IMPROVEMENT
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Avi Bhati, Maxarth LLC
Challenges of Developing a Pretrial Risk Assessment Tool
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Public vs. Private Pretrial Risk Assessment Tools: Are There Any Benefits?
Jim Austin, JFA Institute
Selection and Intervention Effects: Creating Unbiased Risk Assessment Instruments from Real-World Data
Avi Bhati, Maxarth LLC
Discussant:
Michael Ryan Jones, Pretrial Justice Institute
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 666: TRANSLATIONAL TOOLS TO IMPLEMENT EVIDENCE-BASED PRACTICES
(EBPS)
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Validating the Assumptions of the RNR Model Using Correctional Data from Three States
Joseph M. Durso, George Mason University
Erin Crites, George Mason University
Michael S. Caudy, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Validating an RNR-Based Program Evaluation Tool
Erin Crites, George Mason University
Michael S. Caudy, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Effectiveness of an e-Learning Program for Probation Officers
Stephanie A. Ainsworth, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Discussant:
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 667: BEYOND RUTH KORNHAUSER’S SOCIAL SOURCES OF DELINQUENCY:
ADVANCING CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chairs:
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
The Strength of Control Theory
Chester L. Britt, Northeastern University
Barbara Costello, University of Rhode Island
Social and Situational Dynamics of Control
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
300
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Concentrated Disadvantage and Crime
David S. Kirk, University of Texas
Criminal Opportunity from an Offender’s Perspective: Conceptualization and Suggestions for Empirical Testing
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 668: SELF-PERCEPTION, IDENTITY TRANSFORMATION, AND DESISTANCE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Bonita M. Veysey, Rutgers University
Criminal Identities: An Application of the Implicit Associations Test to Criminal Self-Perception
Bonita M. Veysey, Rutgers University
Luis Rivera, Rutgers University
Changing Time: The Role of Agency in Prisoners’ Identity Transformations
Emma Hughes, California State University, Fresno
The Relational Context of Desistance from Crime
Beth Weaver, University of Strathclyde
Discussant:
Barbara Owen, California State University, Fresno
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 669: UNDERSTANDING RACIAL AND ETHNIC DISPARITY IN THE PROBATION
REVOCATION PROCESS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Exploring the Process of Probation Revocations
S. Rebecca Neusteter, The Urban Institute
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
Pamela Lachman, The Urban Institute
Justin Breaux, The Urban Institute
An Empirical Study of Racial and Ethnic Disparities in the Process of Probation Revocation
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
S. Rebecca Neusteter, The Urban Institute
Justin Breaux, The Urban Institute
Pamela Lachman, The Urban Institute
Discussing Policy Implications of Racial and Ethnic Disparity in the Probation Revocation Process
Carl Wicklund, American Probation and Parole Association
Discussant:
Marc Mauer, The Sentencing Project
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 670: STATE AND LOCAL PERSPECTIVES OF TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
301
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Cultural and Organizational Barriers to the Prosecution of Human Trafficking Cases
Amy Farrell, Northeastern University
Jack McDevitt, Northeastern University
Rebecca D. Pfeffer, Northeastern University
Assessing Sex Trafficking Demand-Reduction Strategies in the United States
Michael Shively, Abt Associates Inc.
Sarah Kuck Jalbert, Abt Associates Inc.
Estimating the Unlawful Commercial Sex Economy in the U.S.
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
Patrick Mitchell Downey, The Urban Institute
Bilal Khan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Discussant:
John Picarelli, National Institute of Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 671: THE IMPACT OF RACE ON POLICE USE OF FORCE: LESSONS FROM
EMPIRICAL RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephen D. Mastrofski, George Mason University
The Influence of Race/Ethnicity on Police Use of Force: A Meta-analysis
David B. Wilson, George Mason University
Tammy Rinehart Kochel, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Stephen D. Mastrofski, George Mason University
Discussants:
Robin S. Engel, University of Cincinnati
Joel H. Garner, Bureau of Justice Statistics
William Terrill, Michigan State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 672: CRIME AND PLACE: TARGET LOCATIONS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Richard L. Block, Loyola University Chicago
Mapping the Nighttime Economy and Urban Street Violence
Jerry H. Ratcliffe, Temple University
Cory P. Haberman, Temple University
The Effect of Business Presence on Crime Events at Urban Micro-Places
Wouter Steenbeek, NSCR
Frank van Oort, Utrecht University
Off-Premise Alcohol Outlets and Violence in a College Town: The Role of Outlet, Staff, and Patron Characteristics
Aleksandra J. Snowden, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
William Alex Pridemore, Indiana University
The Environs of Rapid Transit Stations and Robbery: An Interrupted Time Series Analysis
Richard L. Block, Loyola University Chicago
302
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 673: PERIPHERAL BIOLOGICAL CORRELATES OF ANTISOCIAL BEHAVIOR AND
PSYCHOPATHIC TRAITS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Andrea Glenn, Institute of Mental Health, Singapore
Prenatal Testosterone, Psychopathy, and Moral Judgment: A Biosocial Perspective
Yu Gao, Brooklyn College, CUNY
Simone Tang, Stanford University
Do Callous-Unemotional Traits Moderate the Relationship Between Autonomic Reactivity and Conduct Disorder?
Anna Rudo-Hutt, University of Pennsylvania
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Yu Gao, Brooklyn College, CUNY
Liana Soyfer, University of Pennsylvania
Low Heart Rate, Child Psychopathy, and Proactive Aggression in Females
Olivia Choy, University of Pennsylvania
Adrian Raine, University of Pennsylvania
Jill Portnoy, University of Pennsylvania
Anna Rudo-Hutt, University of Pennsylvania
Yu Gao, Brooklyn College, CUNY
Liana Soyfer, University of Pennsylvania
Resting Heart Rate and Antisocial Behavior: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Jill Portnoy, University of Pennsylvania
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 674: FOSTERING POSITIVE YOUTH DEVELOPMENT: REFRAMING THE AIMS OF
JUVENILE JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jeff Butts, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Positive What? Reframing the Goals of Juvenile Justice Interventions
Jeff Butts, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Engagement in Criminal Activity from Adolescence to Young Adulthood: The Role of Protective Factors
Elizabeth C. Hair, NORC at the University of Chicago
Defining and Measuring Positive Youth Outcomes in Juvenile Corrections
Courtney S. Harding, Temple University
Philip W. Harris, Temple University
Beyond Recidivism: Positive Youth Development as a Juvenile Justice Outcome
Shannon Myrick, Oregon Youth Authority
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 675: NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN POLICING AND SECURITY SERVICE DELIVERY AND
NETWORKS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Benoit Dupont, Université de Montréal
303
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Exploring the Policy Implications of the Private Employment of Public Police
Randy K. Lippert, University of Windsor
Danielle Hryniewicz, University of Western Ontario
Policing Uncertainty: The Case of Impaired Driving in the Age of Neo-Liberalism
Rhys Steckle, University of Windsor
Shaping Security Regimes for Public Health: The Changing Face of Policing and Mental Health Service Delivery in Philadelphia
Jennifer Wood, Temple University
Private Security Regimes: An Empirical Exploration of the Forces Shaping the Private Delivery of Security
Benoit Dupont, Université de Montréal
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 676: LONGITUDINAL PATTERNS IN GANG INVOLVEMENT, GANG PERSISTENCE,
AND GANG VIOLENCE AT INDIVIDUAL- AND AGGREGATE-LEVELS OF ANALYSIS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Elizabeth Griffiths, Rutgers University
The Developmental Dynamics of Joining a Gang in Adolescence: Patterns and Predictors of Gang Membership Onset in Adolescence
Amanda Beth Gilman, University of Washington
Karl G. Hill, University of Washington
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Age-Graded Patterns of Gang Membership within a Nationally-Representative Longitudinal Sample of Youth
David C. Pyrooz, Sam Houston State University
Trends in Gang Presence among American Cities, 1996-2009
Elizabeth Griffiths, Rutgers University
George Tita, University of California, Irvine
Two Stories of Nationwide Gang Homicides
Arlen Egley, Jr., National Gang Center
James C. ("Buddy") Howell, National Gang Center / Institute for Intergovernmental Research
MEETING
SESSION 677: DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY BUSINESS MEETING (OPEN TO
ALL PARTICIPANTS)
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Adams Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 678: IDEAS FOR RECYCLING/GREENER EFFORTS AT THE ASC MEETINGS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 5, 7th Floor
Chairs:
Jessica Hodge, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Meredith Worthen, University of Oklahoma
MEETING
SESSION 679: ASSOCIATION OF DOCTORAL PROGRAMS OF CRIMINOLOGY & CRIMINAL
JUSTICE BUSINESS MEETING (ADPCCJ)
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
304
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
MEETING
SESSION 680: ASC POLICY COMMITTEE MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 681: INVISIBLE MEN: MASS INCARCERATION AND THE MYTH OF BLACK
PROGRESS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Author
Becky Pettit, University of Washington
Critics
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Evelyn Patterson, Vanderbilt University
Sara Wakefield, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 682: VULNERABILITY TO VICTIMIZATION AMONG THE ELDERLY AND DISABLED
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Paul D.C. Bones, University of Oklahoma
Explaining Elderly Victimization: Assault, Theft, and Consumer Fraud
Michael Reisig, Arizona State University
Kristy Holtfreter, Arizona State University
Sexual Victimization of the Elderly: An Empirical Analysis of Reported Incidents, 1999-2008
Jeffrey A. Walsh, Illinois State University
Jessie L. Krienert, Illinois State University
Shane Dixon, Illinois State University
Exploring the Relationship between Disability Status and Victimization Risk: The Role of Disability Type
Heidi L. Scherer, Kennesaw State University
Gender, Disability, and Risk: A Target Characteristics Approach to Multiple Disadvantaged Identities and Victimization
Paul D.C. Bones, University of Oklahoma
SESSION 683: POLICE PERFORMANCE MEASUREMENT AND EVALUATION
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Joe Kuhns, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Evaluating Police Departments: A Review of Strategies
Ken Adams, University of Central Florida
Performance Measurement for Police Information Technologies
Tom McEwen, McEwen and Associates LLC
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
Evaluating Police Leadership Development: Is What We Want, What We Get?
Victoria Herrington, Australian Institute of Police Management
Measuring the Skills Hierarchy of Police Officer Job Performance
Beth A. Sanders, Texas State University - San Marcos
305
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 684: STATE STRATEGIES AND (IN)CAPACITY FOR JUSTICE AND SOCIAL CONTROL
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Larry Salinger, Arkansas State University - Jonesboro
Disabling the Able: From the War against the Weak to the War on Terror
Christopher Magno, Gannon University
Sara Lichtenwalter, Gannon University
Extrajudicial Killings, Political Imprisonment and Disappearances in Failing States
Laurie Gould, Georgia Southern University
Matthew Pate, University at Albany, SUNY
State Strategies for Dealing with Unwelcome Information on Torture and Inhuman, Degrading Treatment or Punishment
Tom Daems, Ghent University
The Rule of Law and Preventing Genocide: A Promise Unfulfilled
Alex Alvarez, Northern Arizona University
Discussant:
Thomas Reifer, University of San Diego
SESSION 685: STUDIES ON THE PROBLEM OF CORRUPTION
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Vincenzo Ruggiero, Middlesex University
An Integrated Theory of Corruption: In Search for Individual, Organizational and Systemic Characteristics that Reinforce Each Other
Emile Kolthoff, Open University Netherlands
Anti-Corruption Measures in Brazil: What is New, What is Old, What Works
Karla Padilha Rebelo Marques, Public Ministry, State of Alagoas, Brazil
Alline Pedra Jorge Birol, Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil
Citizens Perception of Corruption in Flanders
Arne Dormaels, University College Ghent
Marleen Easton, University College Ghent
Corruption: The Disappearance of the Victim
Vincenzo Ruggiero, Middlesex University
SESSION 686: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Anita Kalunta-Crumpton, Texas Southern University
Awareness Raising and Training about Torture for Professionals: Results of a European project
Zoë Cosemans, KU Leuven
Stephan Parmentier, Leuven University
Closing the Gap: Understanding Crime Victim Evaluations of Police Legitimacy in Israel
Gali Aviv, Hebrew University
Intimate Partner Violence in the Nigerian Community
Anita Kalunta-Crumpton, Texas Southern University
Emmanuel Onyeozili, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore
306
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 687: THINKING CRITICALLY ABOUT THE "PEER EFFECT": MEASUREMENT AND
SELECTION
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christopher Bryce Keenan, Ohio State University
Assessing the Construct Validity between Self-Reported Delinquency and Direct and Indirect Measures of Peer Delinquency
Ryan Charles Meldrum, Florida International University
John H. Boman, University of Florida
Measuring Personal and Peer Delinquency
Bob Edward Vasquez, Texas State University - San Marcos
Friendship Dynamics and Homophily on Sex Behaviors: Selection or Influence?
Christopher Bryce Keenan, Ohio State University
Nathan Doogan, Ohio State University
Dana L. Haynie, Ohio State University
Brian Soller, Ohio State University
SESSION 688: MODELS OF NEIGHBORHOOD CHANGE AND CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida
Changes in Neighborhood Social Capital and Firearm Shootings: A Mediating Relationship?
Justin C. Medina, Temple University
The Context and Impact of Neighborhood Drug Economies: Continuity and Change over a Ten Year Period
Aileen O'Gorman, University College Dublin
The Effect of New Mass Transit Routes on Crime: A Preliminary Evaluation of Vancouver SkyTrain’s Canada Line
Jordana Kimberly Gallison, Simon Fraser University
The Reciprocal Nature of Neighborhood Effects: An Examination of Racial/Ethnic Change and Crime in Los Angeles
Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida
SESSION 689: PRISONER REENTRY FOR WOMEN II
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Janet Garcia, Rutgers University
Gender Differences in the Effects of Social Networks on Reentry Outcomes
Jennifer Rhiannon Scroggins, Montana State University, Billings
Hoan Ngoc Bui, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Personal, Family, and Community Factors Associated with Perceived Likelihood of Success in Incarcerated Women
Young Ju Chae, Northeastern University
Prisoner Reentry and Gender: The Mentoring Experience of Women in Transition
Janet Garcia, Rutgers University
Jody Miller, Rutgers University
Johnna Christian, Rutgers University
SESSION 690: LAW ENFORCEMENT ACTIVITIES AND TRUST IN POLICE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
John David Reitzel, Virginia Commonwealth University
The Cops of Merton County
Mitch Librett, Bridgewater State University
307
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Impact of Police Effectiveness and Handling of Misconduct on General Trust in Government
Lonnie M. Schaible, University of Colorado - Denver
Joseph T. De Angelis, Denver Office of the Independent Monitor
Brian Wolf, University of Idaho
The Role of Personal and Vicarious Negative Contacts with the Police on Levels of Police Trust
John David Reitzel, Virginia Commonwealth University
Scott C. Booth, Virginia Commonwealth University
Mary Beth Brandl, Virginia Commonwealth University
The Degree of Perception on Police Presence: A Comparison of Targets' and Guardians' Perceptions of Police Activities
Hannarae Lee, Indiana University
SESSION 691: VARIETIES OF POLICE BEHAVIOR IN THE MODERN WORLD
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michael Alan Hollingsworth, Old Dominion University
Mandatory Arrest and Other Laws: A Transnational Perspective of Unintended Consequences to Immigrant Latinas
Guadalupe T. Vidales, University of Wisconsin - Parkside
What Prevents Police Officers from Deserting in Serious Natural Disaster Situations? Experience of Fukushima Prefecture Police
YOSHIKI KOBAYASHI, Keio University, Japan
Women in Police Roles: An Examination of Police Women’s Perceptions of Their Work in Dubai
Doris Chu, Arkansas State University
Women in Policing: A Global Examination of Deployment
Venessa Garcia, Kean University
SESSION 692: SELF-CONTROL THEORY ACROSS THE LIFE COURSE
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Scott Wolfe, University of South Carolina
A Longitudinal Test of Self-Control Theory
Tony R. Smith, Rochester Institute of Technology
Judy Porter, Rochester Institute of Technology
LaVerne McQuiller Williams, Rochester Institute of Technology
Jennifer Gravitz, National Technical Institute for the Deaf
Amy Stornello, National Technical Institute for the Deaf
Self-Control Through Early Adulthood: (In)Stability, (Multi)Dimensionality, and Impact
Callie Harbin Burt, Arizona State University
Gary Sweeten, Arizona State University
The Invariance of Self-Control in Late Life
Scott Wolfe, University of South Carolina
SESSION 693: LETHAL VIOLENCE: FOCUS ON PATTERNS AND CONTEXT
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brent Teasdale, Georgia State University
Spatial Patterns of Homicide: Revitalization and Displacement of Low-Income Areas
Shelly A. McGrath, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Suzanne E. Perumean-Chaney, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Geospatial Distribution of Violence in a College Town
David N. Khey, Loyola University New Orleans
308
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Public Housing and Lethal Violence: An Analysis of Disaggregated Homicides Occurring in Project Neighborhoods
Eric Lesneskie, Western New England University
Examining Prior Criminal Justice System Contact among All Persons Party to Potentially Lethal Criminal Events
Shila Rene' Hawk-Tourtelot, Georgia State University
Dean Dabney, Georgia State University
SESSION 694: ORGANIZED CRIME: THEORY, HISTORY, AND METHODS
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Rick Aniskiewicz, Indiana University Kokomo
Beyond the Mafia: Explaining Organized Crime in Chicago
Robert M. Lombardo, Loyola University Chicago
Gus Tyler and the Socio-Dynamics of Organized Crime
Matthew G. Yeager, King's University College, Western University Canada
Organized Crime: Theoretical and Definitional Challenges
Diana Summers Dolliver, Northeastern University
The Danny Greene Mob versus the Cleveland Mafia: A Historical Event
Frank Hagan, Mercyhurst University
The Historical Foundations of Human Trafficking in the United States: Transnational Organized Crime during the Chinese Exclusion
Era, 1880-1920
Jeffrey Scott McIllwain, San Diego State University
SESSION 695: THE GENDERED NATURE OF INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE: MALE
PERPETRATION
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Aubrey L. Jackson, Ohio State University
Intimate Partner Kidnapping: Patterns and Correlates of Kidnapping among Intimate Partners Using NIBRS
Lindsey Blumenstein, University of Central Florida
So Help Me God: Religiosity and the Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence
Claire M. Renzetti, University of Kentucky
Gender, Social Desirability, and Intimate Partner Violence Reporting Discrepancies among Young Adult Couples
Marin Wenger, Pennsylvania State University
The Influences of Women’s Individual- and Neighborhood-Level Resources on the Risk of Intimate Partner Violence
Aubrey L. Jackson, Ohio State University
SESSION 696: QUALITATIVE INQUIRY AND THE FUTURE OF CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
"Gonzo Research": Using Unsystematic Social Observation to Develop Criminological Theory
Martin Innes, Universities' Police Science Institute, Cardiff University
Can Qualitative Research Be "Evidence?": A Case for Non-Causal Research Informing Justice Practice
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
Why there is a Need for a Qualitative Journal in Criminology and Criminal Justice
Willard M. Oliver, Sam Houston State University
Discussant:
Patrick Carr, Rutgers University
309
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 697: THE GENDERED AND RACIALIZED DELINQUENCY AND JUVENILE JUSTICE
EXPERIENCES OF AT-RISK YOUTH
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Bradley R. Ray, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
A Crossover Population Study: Comparing Delinquency Outcomes
Susan Elaine Day, Florida Atlantic University
Gordon Bazemore, Florida Atlantic University
Joan T. Pennell, North Carolina State University
Gender Differences in Risk and Protective Factors among Juvenile Probationers
Amy Stork, McLean County Juvenile Probation
Sesha Kethineni, Illinois State University
Girls in the Juvenile Justice System: The Relation between Risk Factors and the Severity of the Sentence
Anne-Marie Slotboom, VU University
Social Control, Racial Differences and Similarities in Factors Related to Girls on Probation
Camille R. Quinn, University of Illinois at Chicago
SESSION 698: EDUCATION FACILITIES AND CRIME PREVENTION POLICY
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Charles Scheer, Michigan State University
Bullying in Ohio Schools: The Status of Prevention and Policy
Ashley Ann Hicks, Ohio State University
Deanna L. Wilkinson, Ohio State University
The Safety of Our Kids: A Spatial Analysis of Juvenile Crime Surrounding Educational Facilities
Cassandra Ramdath, John Jay College of Criminal Justice / CUNY Graduate Center
The Stick and The Carrot: School Sanctions and Peer Network Positions in the Study of Students’ Delinquency
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Kiminori Nakamura, University of Maryland
Preventing College Student Drunk Driving with On-Campus Alcohol Policy: A Multi-Level Model
Jing Liu, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 699: SELF-CONTROL THEORY AND CRIME/DELINQUENCY
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gregory Zimmerman, Northeastern University
Comparing Male Fitness and Self-Control as Determinants of Self-Reported Violent Crime
Chris Esselmont, University of Calgary
Do Social Skills Mediate the Self-Control – Violence Relationship?
Terrance J. Taylor, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Dena Carson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Microanomie, Self-Control and White Collar Crime
Mark Konty, Public Scholar
Michele W. Ganon, Western Connecticut State University
James Donegan, Western Connecticut State University
310
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Role of Neighborhood Context in the Relationship between Self-Control and Crime
Ekaterina Botchkovar, Northeastern University
Gregory Zimmerman, Northeastern University
Olena Antonaccio, University of Miami
SESSION 700: NEW APPROACHES TO PRISONER REENTRY
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Nicole Smolter, California State University, Los Angeles
Community Wise: A New Approach to Reentry
Ellen Benoit, National Development and Research Institutes, Inc.
Liliane C. Windsor, Rutgers University
Meanings of a Second Chance: Understanding Reentry in the Federal Context
Sara Steen, University of Colorado - Boulder
Devon Thacker Thomas, University of Colorado - Boulder
Considering Non-Criminal Justice Approaches to Offender Reentry
Nicole Smolter, California State University, Los Angeles
SESSION 701: ROUNDTABLE: DUTCH STUDY GROUP ON THE TRANSITION FROM JUVENILE
DELINQUENCY INTO ADULT CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Introduction
Rolf Loeber, University of Pittsburgh
Criminal Careers
Arjan Blokland, NSCR
Context Effects on Criminal Careers of Young Adult Offenders
Henk Elffers, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Special Offender Groups
Catrien Bijleveld, NSCR
Justice Response
André Van der Laan, WODC
European Perspectives
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
Outcomes of the Dutch Study Group on the Transition from Juvenile Delinquency into Adult Crime
Peter H. van der Laan, NSCR / VU University Amsterdam
SESSION 702: ROUNDTABLE: WOMEN IN PRISON IN ENGLAND AND WALES AND SOUTH
KOREA
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Rosemary Lorraine Gido, The Prison Journal
Discussants:
Janice Joseph, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Bitna Kim, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Soo-Jung Byoun, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
311
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 703: ROUNDTABLE: GANG TALK IN THE STATE OF UNREASON
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Gang Talking Fantasies and Realities in the U.K.
Simon Russell Hallsworth, University Campus Suffolk
Looking for Gangs in all the Wrong Places: The ICE Attack on Long Island
David Charles Brotherton, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Discussants:
Luca Palmus, University of Genoa
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
SESSION 704: ROUNDTABLE: GENDER DYNAMICS AND RESPONDING TO THE CHALLENGING
OR RESISTANT STUDENT
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Allison Foley, Augusta State University
Discussants:
Stephen P. Hagan, McKendree University
Jennifer Hartsfield, Bridgewater State University
Kristi Holsinger, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Jesenia Pizarro, Michigan State University
Christine Rasche, University of North Florida
Robin A Robinson, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
SESSION 705: GENDER AND DRUGS II
Friday, November 16 - 11:00 am to 12:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Martin Hall, University of Louisville
Being an Addicted Criminal Mother: An Understanding of Intricate Relationships
Amelie Couvrette, Université de Montréal
Serge Brochu, Université de Montréal
Chantal Plourde, Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières
Methamphetamine Use and Motherhood
Mikhial Vincent Gunderman, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Involvement in Substance Use among Women on Probation and Parole: An Attachment and Coping Perspective
Amanda J. Dishon, University of Louisville
Tanya Renn, University of Louisville
Seana Golder, University of Louisville
Prescription Opioid Misuse among Women on Probation and Parole
Martin Hall, University of Louisville
Seana Golder, University of Louisville
Tanya Renn, University of Louisville
Amanda J. Dishon, University of Louisville
George Higgins, University of Louisville
T.K. Logan, University of Kentucky
312
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 706: RESULTS FROM THE NATIONAL POLICE RESEARCH PLATFORM
LONGITUDINAL STUDIES OF NEW RECRUITS AND SUPERVISORS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Lorie Ann Fridell, University of South Florida
Coping with a High-Stress Environment: A Longitudinal Look at Police Recruits
William P. McCarty, University of Illinois at Chicago
Daniel S. Lawrence, University of Illinois at Chicago
Chi C. Cho, University of Illinois at Chicago
Predicting Procedurally Just Behavior: Examining Personality and Communication Styles in New Officers
Daniel S. Lawrence, University of Illinois at Chicago
Dennis P. Rosenbaum, University of Illinois at Chicago
Analyzing Organizational Commitment as a Mediator Between Procedural Justice and Burnout and Cynicism in Police Supervisors
Chris Donner, University of South Florida
Lorie Ann Fridell, University of South Florida
Community Cynicism Trajectories in New Officers
Jennifer L. Lanterman, University of Nevada, Reno
Jon Maskaly, University of South Florida
Megan Alderden, Saint Xavier University
Dennis P. Rosenbaum, University of Illinois at Chicago
Lorie Ann Fridell, University of South Florida
Discussant:
Ellen Scrivner, Office of National Drug Control Policy
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 707: UNITED NATIONS PANEL II: DEMOCRATIC POLICING AND HUMAN RIGHTS MODELS AND MEASUREMENT
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
Modern Forms of Policing in the Context of Human Rights
Elmar Weitekamp, University of Tuebingen
Stephan Parmentier, Leuven University
Policing and Human Rights: Some Notes from Ethnography
Peter K. Manning, Northeastern University
Measuring All that Matters: A Case for Assessing Police Human Rights Interventions
Jack Greene, Northeastern University
Contemporary Community Policing and Human Rights in Slovenia: Results from Focus Group Interviews
Gorazd Mesko, University of Maribor, FCJS
Discussant:
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
313
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 708: THE NATIONAL INSIDE-OUT PRISON EXCHANGE PROGRAM: RESEARCH AND
ETHICS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Exploring How Change Happens in Inside-Out Courses
M. Kay Harris, Temple University
Challenges Conducting Research in the Inside-Out (I/O) Context
Angela Bryant, Ohio State University - Newark
Yasser Payne, University of Delaware
The Inside-Out Learning Experience: A Pilot Study of Individual and Collective Efficacy
Sarah Allred, Berry College
A Unified Voice: Student Perspectives of the Inside-Out Experience
Aryn Howland, Morehead State University
Stephanie Butler, Morehead State University
Discussant:
Katie Pantaleo, Lock Haven University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 709: NEW PERSPECTIVES ON CHILDREN OF INCARCERATED PARENTS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Children of Incarcerated Mothers: The Relationship between Mother-Child Contact, Caregiving Instability and Problem Behavior
Sanne Hissel, VU University Amsterdam / Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Catrien Bijleveld, NSCR
Mirjam Oosterman, VU University Amsterdam
Carlo Schuengel, VU University Amsterdam
Peter H. van der Laan, NSCR / VU University Amsterdam
Adult Criminal Outcomes in an At-Risk Sample of Youth
Jane A. Siegel, Rutgers University
Pathways to Resiliency for Children of Incarcerated Parents
Kate Luther, Pacific Lutheran University
Discussant:
Sara Wakefield, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 710: CRIME AND JUSTICE ISSUES IN ARMENIA, HONDURAS, EUROPE AND THE
UNITED STATES
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Fawn T. Ngo, University of South Florida, Sarasota-Manatee
The Nature of Pre-Trial Detention for Juveniles in the Republic of Armenia
Satenik Margaryan, Montclair State University
Aleksandr Khechumian, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
A Study of Attitudes and Perceptions of Honduran Police Officers
Wayne J. Pitts, RTI International
314
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Treatment of Elderly Prisoners under European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
Aleksandr Khechumian, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
Examining the Behavioral Reactions among Stalking Victims and Assessing the Effectiveness of Legal and Social Responses to
Stalking
Fawn T. Ngo, University of South Florida, Sarasota-Manatee
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 711: COMMUNITY PERCEPTIONS OF INTIMATE PARTNER ABUSE AMONG HIGH
SCHOOL STUDENTS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Helen Marie Eigenberg, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Youth Impressions of Intimate Partner Abuse in High School
Sharon Redhawk Love, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Roger Thompson, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Community Impressions of Intimate Partner Violence among High School Students
Sharon Redhawk Love, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
College Students’ Assessment of the Nature of Intimate Partner Abuse in High Schools
Helen Marie Eigenberg, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
School Staff and Their Views about Intimate Partner Abuse in High Schools
Helen Marie Eigenberg, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Beth Dodd, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 712: CRIME AND JUSTICE IN AMERICA, 1975-2025: PUNISHMENT AND PREVENTION
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chair:
Michael Tonry, University of Minnesota / NSCR
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Deterrence
Daniel Nagin, Carnegie Mellon University
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Sentencing
Michael Tonry, University of Minnesota / NSCR
Crime and Justice, 1975-2025: Policing
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
Comments
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Discussant:
Michael Tonry, University of Minnesota / NSCR
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 713: METHODOLOGICAL ISSUES IN BIOSOCIAL RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Marriage, Employment, and Criminal Behavior: A Behavioral Genetic Analysis
Danielle Boisvert, Sam Houston State University
315
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Risk, Resilience, and Antisocial Behavior: An Investigation of the Orchid Hypothesis
Jamie Newsome, University of Texas at San Antonio
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Michael Benson, University of Cincinnati
Statistical Issues in Gene x Environment Research
Jamie Vaske, Western Carolina University
Jeffrey T. Ward, University of Texas at San Antonio
The Stability of Self-Control in Early Childhood
Michelle Anne Coyne, University of Cincinnati
John Paul Wright, University of Cincinnati
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 714: OFFICE OF JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION
MENTORING RESEARCH STUDIES AND FINDINGS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Tyson, U.S. DOJ, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
Moving towards Evidence-Based Mentoring: OJJDP’s Mentoring Research and Programming
Michael Alan Shader, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
Jennifer Tyson, U.S. DOJ, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
Barbara Tatem Kelley, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (USDOJ)
Paid Mentoring Evaluation
Stephanie Hawkins Anderson, RTI International
James Trudeau, RTI International
Kimberly Breeden, Big Brothers Big Sisters of the Triangle
Putting Empirically Supported Practices to the Test: The Youth-Centered Match Support Study
David DuBois, University of Illinois at Chicago
Youth Mentoring for Juvenile Justice System-Involved Youth: An Exploratory Analysis of the Referral Stage
J. Mitchell Miller, University of Texas at San Antonio
Holly Ventura Miller, University of Texas at San Antonio
J.C. Barnes, University of Texas at Dallas
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 715: INDIGENOUS PEOPLES AND THE PROBLEM OF CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Indigenous European Justice and Other Indigenous Justices
Biko Agozino, Virginia Tech
Empowering Indigenous Justice in the Neocolonial Context
Juan Marcellus Tauri, Queensland University of Technology
Changing Narratives: Colonized Peoples and the Problem of Criminology
Chris Cunneen, James Cook University
Discussant:
James Opolot, Texas Southern University
316
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 716: PUNISHMENT AND SOCIETY: THE POLITICAL VARIABLE, COMPARATIVELY
(ORGANIZED BY THE JOURNAL "PUNISHMENT AND SOCIETY")
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Dario Melossi, University of Bologna
Migration and Imprisonment: Comparing the European Union and the United States
Dario Melossi, University of Bologna
Mapping the Shadow Carceral State: Toward an Institutionally Capacious Approach to Punishment
Katherine Beckett, University of Washington
Naomi Murakawa, University of Washington
Transition to Democracy, Politics and Punishment in Argentina
Maximo Sozzo, Universidad Nacional del Litoral, Santa Fe, Argentina
Discussant:
Joachim J. Savelsberg, University of Minnesota
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 717: THE INTERNATIONAL CONTROL OF MONEY LAUNDERING
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Criminalizing International Finance or Financializing International Crime? The Inexorable Creep of Global Regulation of Anti-Money
Laundering
Terry Halliday, American Bar Foundation
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Peter Reuter, University of Maryland
Intelligence-Led Illusions
Luuk Ritzen, Maastricht University
Hans Nelen, Maastricht University
Anti-Money Laundering in Eastern Europe
Philip Gounev, Center for the Study of Democracy
Discussant:
Terry Halliday, American Bar Foundation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 718: CRIME AND PLACE: ADVANCED MODELING OF CRIME AND PLACE
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kim Rossmo, Texas State University
Spatial and Temporal Patterns in Serial Crime
Kim Rossmo, Texas State University
Anne Li Kringen, Texas State University - San Marcos
Jonathan G. Allen, Texas State University
The Influence of Offender Mobility on the Likelihood of Arrest of Serial Offenders
Marre Lammers, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Wim Bernasco, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
317
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Identifying Suspects, Discovering New Offenders, and Linking Crimes: Crime Series Identification Using Model-Based Clustering
Michael D. Porter, GeoEye Analytics
Brian J. Reich, North Carolina State University
Generative Explanations Of Crime: Using Simulation to Explore Criminological Theory
Daniel Birks, Griffith University
Timing Crime: Spatio-Temporal Aspects of Criminal Target Choice
Stijn Ruiter, NSCR
Wim Bernasco, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Discussant:
Shane Johnson, University College London
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 719: CONSEQUENCES OF CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Trajectories of Risk Associated with Childhood Abuse and Neglect of Low-Income Urban African American Girls
Helen W. Wilson, Rosalind Franklin University of Medicine and Science
Does Having a Relationship with a Significant Adult Reduce the Risk of Delinquency for Maltreated Children?
Carly Baetz, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Pathways from Child Maltreatment to Alcohol Use in Middle Adulthood: The Role of Adolescent and Young Adult Problem
Behaviors and Neighborhood Characteristics
Preeti Chauhan, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Cathy Spatz Widom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 720: EFFECTS OF THE COMMUNITIES THAT CARE PREVENTION SYSTEM ON
ADOLESCENT DRUG USE, DELINQUENCY, AND VIOLENCE: RESULTS FROM A COMMUNITY
RANDOMIZED TRIAL
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
The Implementation of Prevention Programs in the Community Youth Development Study
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
Koren Hanson, University of Washington
Michael Arthur, University of Washington
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Sustained Decreases in Risk Exposure and Youth Problem Behaviors after Installation of the Communities that Care Prevention
System
Sabrina Oesterle, University of Washington
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Eric Brown, University of Washington
Kathryn Monahan, University of Pittsburgh
Robert Abbott, University of Washington
Michael Arthur, University of Washington
Richard Catalano, University of Washington
318
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Communities that Care is a Good Investment: A Cost-Benefit Analysis of Eighth Grade Prevention Effects
Margaret Kuklinski, University of Washington
John Briney, University of Washington
J. David Hawkins, University of Washington
Richard Catalano, University of Washington
Discussant:
Delbert Elliott, University of Colorado
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 721: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: THE SOCIOLOGY OF KNOWLEDGE
GENERATION - THE PEOPLE AND AGENCIES BEHIND EXPERIMENTAL AND QUASIEXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH IN POLICING (ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION OF
EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY)
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
Who Generates Police Evaluation Research? A Description of Agencies
Breanne Cave, George Mason University
Julie Grieco, George Mason University
Cody Telep, George Mason University
Repeat Players and Rigorous Police Evaluation Research
Julie Grieco, George Mason University
Breanne Cave, George Mason University
Cody Telep, George Mason University
The Receptivity of Police to Research
Cody Telep, George Mason University
Cynthia Lum, George Mason University
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
Discussants:
Cody Telep, George Mason University
Christopher Koper, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 722: THE UTILITY OF NIBRS FOR VIOLENCE RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Donald Faggiani, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
Understanding Hate as a Motivation for Violent Crime
James J. Nolan, West Virginia University
Karen Weiss, West Virginia University
Getting the Crime Rate Down, Revisited: Completed, Attempted, and Downgraded Crimes
Daniel Bibel, Massachusetts State Police
Lynn A. Addington, American University
A Criminal Opportunity Model of Violence Against Police: A Hierarchical Examination of the Role of an Offender’s Criminal History
on Assaults Against Law Enforcement
Donald Faggiani, University of Wisconsin - Oshkosh
Daniel Bibel, Massachusetts State Police
319
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Annual NIBRS Victim, Offender, and Arrest Counts and Rates by Age, Race
Roland Chilton, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Discussant:
Lynn A. Addington, American University
RECEPTION
SESSION 723: DIVISION OF INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY AWARDS PRESENTATION AND
RECEPTION (OPEN TO ALL PARTICIPANTS)
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Adams Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 724: THE SCIENTIFIC ADVISORY COMMITTEE OF THE NSCR (CLOSED SESSION)
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 725: DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME LUNCHEON & SYMPOSIUM
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 726: RUTGERS UNIVERSITY ALUMNI ASSOCIATION LUNCHEON
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 2:00 pm
Wabash Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 727: MARITAL STATUS AND VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Abusive Men's Indirect Control of Their Partner during the Process of Separation
Brittany E. Hayes, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Intimate Partner Violence in First Marriages and Cohabitations: The Salience of Adolescent Victimization
Danielle Kuhl, Bowling Green State University
David F. Warner, University of Nebraska - Lincoln
Variations in Predictors of Separation/Divorce Assault across Geographical Regions
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Callie Marie Rennison, University of Colorado - Denver
SESSION 728: POLICING HIGH-ACTIVITY CRIME PLACES
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Shea W. Cronin, Boston University
Increased Police Patrols around Hot Spots
Matthias Baenziger, University of Zurich, Switzerland
Martin Killias, Zurich University, Switzerland
An Evaluation of a Police Intervention on Budget Motels
Emmanuel Barthe, University of Nevada, Reno
Matthew C. Leone, University of Nevada
320
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Profiling or 'Good Policing'? A Preliminary Overlay of NYPD Stop-Question-Frisk Contacts and NYC Crime Hotspots
Heather Burns, Seattle University
“Cops on the Dots” in Time?: Evaluating CompStat’s Effect on Focused Policing across Time and Space
Shea W. Cronin, Boston University
SESSION 729: PROSECUTORS AND DEFENSE ATTORNEYS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Mark Motivans, U.S. Department of Justice
Implementation of the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Prevention Act: Patterns from a Decade of Federal Prosecutions
Amy Farrell, Northeastern University
Job Stress among Public Defenders: A Multilevel Analysis
Tae Choo, Gainesville State College
Hoon Lee, Western Carolina University
Partisanship and Indigent Defense Spending: A Sample of State Public Defender Offices
Sean M. Falconer, Washington State University
Christopher M. Campbell, Washington State University
Lauren Block, Washington State University
Mia J. Abboud, Washington State University
The Effects of Attorney Type on Sentencing Outcomes
M.J. Gathings, North Carolina State University
Kylie Parrotta, Delaware State University
SESSION 730: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES ON PERCEPTIONS OF CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Marlyn J. Jones, California State University, Sacramento
Arab-Israeli Women’s Attitudes toward Punishing Violent Husbands and Helping Battered Women
Amart Zaatut, Rutgers University
Code of the Rez: Perceptions of Violence, Crime and Justice in Indian Country
Favian Alejandro Martin, Old Dominion University
Trust in Justice in Japan
Koichi Hamai, Ryukoku University
Masahiro Tsushima, Ryukoku University
Understanding Crime and Crime Rate in China
Moulin Xiong, Southwestern University of Finance and Economics
Analysis of Suicides in a High-Violence Caribbean Society
Marlyn J. Jones, California State University, Sacramento
SESSION 731: TERRORIST, DRUG, AND SMUGGLING ORGANIZATIONS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Gregg W. Etter, University of Central Missouri
Terrorism, Drugs, and Organized Crime: The New Alliances, Business Models, and Criminal Justice Challenges
Richard H. Hubbard, Private Attorney
Designating Mexican Drug Trafficking Organizations as Foreign Terrorist Groups
Dean C. Alexander, Western Illinois University
321
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Morphology of South-East Asian Drug Trafficking Syndicates in Australia
Vy Kim Le, Queensland University of Technology
The Virtualization of Retail Level Stimulant Drug Markets
Judith Aldridge, University of Manchester
Majid Yar, University of Hull
Women's Experiences as Human Smugglers on the U.S. Mexico Border
Gabriella Erendira Sanchez, Arizona State University
SESSION 732: SPECIAL POPULATIONS IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Melissa J. Stacer, University of Southern Indiana
Older Prison Inmates - An Accelerating Development?
Joachim Obergfell-Fuchs, Department of Corrections Baden-Wuerttemberg
The "Doing Time" Experiences of Sex Offenders: A Critical Assessment of the Effectiveness of Imprisonment Policies and
Reintegration Outcomes
Emma R. Willis, Appalachian State University
Barbara H. Zaitzow, Appalachian State University
The Experiences of Transgender and Gender Variant People in Women's Correctional Facilities
Elisabeth Marie Long, University of Colorado - Boulder
Veterans in Prison: Adaptation to Institutional Environments
Melissa J. Stacer, University of Southern Indiana
Monica Solinas-Saunders, Indiana University Northwest
SESSION 733: NEW THOUGHTS ON CULTURE, NORMS AND VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mark Konty, Public Scholar
Cultural Roots and Social Implications of the Sovereign Citizen Movement in the United States
Shela R. Van Ness, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Merton with Energy, Katz with Structure, Jock Young with Facebook
Landon Shane Bevier, University of Tennessee
The Contagion of Violence: How Violent Crime Spreads
Gary Slutkin, University of Illinois at Chicago
Charles Ransford, University of Illinois at Chicago
Murder, Suicide, and Political Intrigue: Images of Crime and Punishment in Opera
Barbara Ann Stolz, U.S. GAO
SESSION 734: THE COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF INCARCERATION II
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota
The Public Health Implications of Prisoner Reentry: California's Experience
Lois Davis, RAND Corporation
Unpaid Debt to Society: Exploring How Ex-felons View Restrictions on Voting Rights after the Completion of Their Sentence
Bryan Lee Miller, Georgia Southern University
Collateral Consequence Laws and State Rates of Returns to Prison
Tracy Sohoni, University of Maryland, College Park
322
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Contingent Effect of Incarceration on State Health Outcomes
Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota
Jason Schnittker, University of Pennsylvania
Sarah Shannon, University of Minnesota
Michael Massoglia, University of Wisconsin
SESSION 735: HISTORICAL DYNAMICS OF THE U.S. CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Claudio G. Vera Sanchez, San Jose State University
From Impostor Rule to Identity Theft Laws: The Development of Financial Identity in America
Jennifer Trost, Utica College
Plantations to Penitentiaries, Poor Relief to PRWOA: Du Boisian Meditations on Punishment and the Politics of Provision
Reuben Miller, Loyola University Chicago
Prisoner Reentry and Programming Trends in the Federal System
Jeri Kirby, West Virginia University
Police Legitimacy for Latinos and African Americans: Where the Ghetto leaves off for African Americans Anti-Immigration Continues
for Latinos
Claudio G. Vera Sanchez, San Jose State University
SESSION 736: SOCIAL CONTROL THEORY
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Marthinus C. Koen, George Mason University
Household Work Arrangements, Gaps in Parental Control, and Socially Undesirable Behaviors among Adolescents: Evidence from the
National Longitudinal Study of Youth
Joshua A. Hendrix, North Carolina State University
Reconceptualizing Social Control Theory: Dynamics of Stability Frustration
D. Kyle Sutherland, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Perceived Certainty and Rural Delinquency - The Comparative Effect of Formal and Informal Social Control on Drug Use by Rural
Adolescents
Scott Akins, Oregon State University
Richard Stansfield, University of Delaware
Charles Lanfear, Oregon State University
Social Control: A Comprehensive Definition
Marthinus C. Koen, George Mason University
Kerri Christina Legette, George Mason University
SESSION 737: SEX OFFENDERS: PATTERNS OF OFFENDING
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
James Byrne, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Examining the Impact of Maltreatment Early in Life on Adult Offending among Incarcerated Sex Offenders
Amy Reckdenwald, University of Central Florida
Christina Mancini, Florida Atlantic University
Eric Beauregard, Simon Fraser University
Female Sex Offenders: Comparisons to Other Female Offenders and Male Sex Offenders
Kimberly A. Bender, Michigan State University
Sheryl Kubiak, Michigan State University
Poco Kernsmith, Wayne State University
Roger Kernsmith, Eastern Michigan University
323
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Offending Patterns of Serial Sex Offenders: A Close Look at Specialization, Escalation, and De-Escalation of Sexually Intrusive and
Violent Behaviors
Ashley N. Hewitt, Simon Fraser University
Eric Beauregard, Simon Fraser University
Patterns in the Adolescent Criminal Careers of Male Juvenile Sex Offenders Prior to the Onset of Sex Offending
Jesse Cale, Griffith University
Benoit Leclerc, Griffith University
Christopher Dowling, Griffith University
Stephen Smallbone, Griffith University
Comparative Analysis of Behavioral Patterns in Single versus Serial Rapists
Erin Kearns, American University
C. Gabrielle Salfati, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 738: PSYCHOLOGICAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL CAUSES OF WHITE-COLLAR
OFFENDING
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jeong Hyun Kim, Rutgers University
Situational Action Theory and the Causation of White-Collar Crime
Aleksandra Jordanoska, Queen Mary, University of London
The Role of Disfluency in Hacker’s Appraisal of the Compromised Computer
Yaron Shlomi, University of Maryland
David Maimon, University of Maryland
Michel Cukier, University of Maryland
A Study of Information Theft Patterns and Causes by Organizational Types
Jeong Hyun Kim, Rutgers University
SESSION 739: INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE AMONG SAME-SEX COUPLES
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Leana Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
An Exploration of Risk Factors for Perpetration of Same-Sex Intimate Partner Violence among LGB
Juan Barredo, University of Central Florida
Xavier Guadalupe-Diaz, University of Central Florida
Same-Sex Intimate Partner Violence: An Analysis of Violence among Gay Men
Caryn Bell Gerstenberger, University of California, Riverside
Sexual Orientation and the Health Consequences of Intimate Partner Violence
Maria Koeppel, Sam Houston State University
Leana Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 740: SOCIAL NETWORK ANALYSIS AND CRIMINAL ORGANIZATIONS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephane Leman-Langlois, Laval University
Co-Offending Networks, Brokerage Positioning, and Versatility in Gang Offending
Jason Gravel, Simon Fraser University
Martin Bouchard, Simon Fraser University
Mi Familia: A Social Network Analysis of the Mexican Mafia
Khadija Monk, Bridgewater State University
Aili Malm, California State University, Long Beach
324
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Social Network Analysis of Organized Crime Groups in United Kingdom
Miles Tarquin Bonfield, University of Cambridge
Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge / Hebrew University
The Small World of Al Capone: The Embedded and Multiplex Nature of Organized Crime
Chris M. Smith, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
SESSION 741: INTRAGENERATIONAL AND INTERGENERATIONAL SIMILARITY IN
OFFENDING
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Richard Spano, Indiana University
Intergenerational Consistency of Parents and Children on Achenbach CBCL Behaviors
Marvin D. Krohn, University of Florida
Rebekah Chu, University at Albany, SUNY
Alan J. Lizotte, University at Albany, SUNY
Terence P. Thornberry, University of Maryland
Arna L. Carlock, University at Albany, SUNY
Amanda D. Emmert, University at Albany, SUNY
Intergenerational Transmission of Antisociality and the Role of Parenting Practices in Early Childhood
Stacy Tzoumakis, Simon Fraser University
Patrick Lussier, Universite Laval
Raymond R. Corrado, Simon Fraser University
Sibling Resemblance in Criminal Behavior Across the Transition to Adulthood
Sonja Siennick, Florida State University
Roshni T. Ladny, Florida State University
The Overlap between Sibling and Index Victim Maltreatment: Quantifying Cumulative Risk of Abuse and Neglect in the Household
Richard Spano, Indiana University
SESSION 742: RESPONDING TO TERRORISM AND OTHER DISSENTING BEHAVIOR
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Colleen Hackett, University of Colorado - Boulder
Some People Just Need Killing: Assassination or Targeted Killing of American Citizens?
Thomas R. O'Connor, Austin Peay State University
The Law Enforcement Response to Maoist Insurgency: A Network Analysis of State-Society Relations in Contexts of Violence
Madhukar Shetty, University at Albany, SUNY
Police First Responders' Inside World in Suicide Bomb Attack Evacuation
Yosi Hod, Zefat College
Brenda Geiger, Western Galilee College
Criminalizing Protest, Politicizing Protestors: The Case of Occupy Denver
Colleen Hackett, University of Colorado - Boulder
SESSION 743: INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL PREDICTORS OF PRISONER REENTRY
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Marcus Kolhman, University of Massachusetts Boston
Level of Education and its Impact on Felony Offender Recidivism
Andrew Verheek, Western Michigan University
Lisa Marie Kruse, Western Michigan University
325
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Pre-Imprisonment Employment Drops: Another Instance of the Ashenfelter Dip?
Charles Loeffler, University of Chicago
To be or not to be Old: Ageing in Prison and its Impact on Reintegration
Joane Martel, Universite Laval
Evaluating Parolees’ Needs and Identifying Risk Factors of Recidivism in a State Parole System
Marcus Kolhman, University of Massachusetts Boston
Xiaogang Deng, University of Massachusetts Boston
Moreno Di Marco, University of Massachusetts Boston
Stephanie Hartwell, University of Massachusetts Boston
SESSION 744: YOUNG DRUG USERS II
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brandy Barenna Henderson, University of South Florida
Choice of Statistical Technique: Implications for Understanding Sex Differences in Adolescent Substance Use
Rachel Bridges Whaley, Southern Illinois University
Not What the Doctor Ordered: An Examination of the Non-Medical Use of Prescription Stimulants among College Students
Rob Weidner, University of Minnesota - Duluth
Jeff Maahs, University of Minnesota - Duluth
Perceptions of Illegal Drug Use as a Grouping Factor
James Henry Bowers, Saginaw Valley State University
Interactive Effects: Peers, Sensation Seeking, and Substance Use
Brandy Barenna Henderson, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
Donald R. Lynam, Purdue University
SESSION 745: ROUNDTABLE: INJUSTICE BEFORE TRIAL: REVIEWING THE EARLY
DECISIONS DURING THE FORMAL CRIMINAL JUSTICE PROCESS AND THE IMPACT THEY
MAY HAVE ON CRIMINAL DEFENDANTS
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Hamin Shabazz, Stevenson University
Patrick Ibe, Albany State University
Evaristus Obinyan, Clark Atlanta University
SESSION 746: ROUNDTABLE: HEARING THE VOICES OF IMPRISONED WOMEN
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Azrini Wahidin, Queen's University Belfast
Discussants:
Ronald Aday, Middle Tennessee State University
Meredith Dye, Middle Tennessee State University
Christina Quinlan, University College Dublin
Mary Corcoran, Keele University
Margaret Malloch, University of Stirling
SESSION 747: ROUNDTABLE: INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Alone or Together?: A Multilevel Examination of Immigration and Intimate Partner Violence
Adrienne Celaya, University of Miami
326
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Content Analysis of Research Articles on Domestic Violence Perpetrator Treatment
Michelle VanNatta, Dominican University
Contextual Challenges Facing Domestic Violence Coordinating Committees
Mavis Morton, University of Guelph
Protecting Black Female Victims of Intimate Partner Abuse
Doris Lewis Edmonds, Norfolk State University
Self-Control, Parental Neglect, and Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration: Differences for Males and Females
Denise Crisafi, University of Central Florida
Socially Interactive Technology and Contemporary Dating: A Cross-Cultural Analysis of Intimacy, Hurt, and Intervention
Alison Marganski, Virginia Wesleyan College
SESSION 748: ROUNDTABLE: MEDICAL MARIJUANA AND THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE SYSTEM
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nancy Marion, University of Akron
Discussants:
David Licate, University of Akron
Valerie Callanan, University of Akron
Dwayne Jones, University of Akron
Patricia Millhoff, University of Akron
SESSION 749: MENTAL DISORDER AND OFFENDING
Friday, November 16 - 12:30 pm to 1:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stacy Calhoun, University of California, Irvine / UCLA - ISAP
Gendering Depression, Drugs, and Crime among Young Adults
Melissa Thompson, Portland State University
Hyeyoung Woo, Portland State University
Predictors of Arrest amongst People Diagnosed with Major Mental Disorders
Ellen Ballard, Georgia State University
Brent Teasdale, Georgia State University
The Effect of Learning Disabilities on Delinquency among Youth: A Meta-Analysis
Mary Katherine Evans, University of Southern Mississippi
Mentally Ill Parolees: A Qualitative Exploration of the Factors That Influence Their Criminal Offending
Stacy Calhoun, University of California, Irvine / UCLA - ISAP
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 750: COLLEGE STUDENTS AS BYSTANDERS IN PREVENTING AND RESPONDING TO
CRIMES AGAINST WOMEN ON COLLEGE CAMPUSES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
Frequency and Correlates of Engaging Peers in Sexual Violence Prevention on College Campuses
Emily Clear, University of Kentucky
Ann Coker, University of Kentucky
Corrine Williams, University of Kentucky
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Suzanne Swan, University of South Carolina
327
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Frequency and Correlates of Active Bystanding Behaviors to Prevent Dating and Sexual Violence on College Campuses
Ann Coker, University of Kentucky
Emily Clear, University of Kentucky
Corrine Williams, University of Kentucky
Timothy Crawford, University of Kentucky
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Suzanne Swan, University of South Carolina
The Context of Bystander Intervention in Dating and Sexual Violence on College Campuses
Jane E. Palmer, National Institute of Justice / American University
Discussant:
Sarah E. Ullman, University of Illinois at Chicago
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 751: POLICE LEGITIMACY AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE: ITS MEANING AND
CONSEQUENCES ACROSS INDIVIDUALS AND COMMUNITIES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephen D. Mastrofski, George Mason University
Legitimacy as a Neighborhood Level Construct
Tammy Rinehart Kochel, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
Justice Tankebe, University of Cambridge
A Grounded Approach to Developing a Police Legitimacy Scale
Justice Tankebe, University of Cambridge
Tammy Rinehart Kochel, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale
The Systematic Observation of Procedural Justice in Police Encounters with the Public
Tal Jonathan-Zamir, The Hebrew University
Stephen D. Mastrofski, George Mason University
James J. Willis, George Mason University
Lauren Revier, George Mason University
Luke Dillon, George Mason University
Policing and Collective Efficacy: Do Perceptions of Police Effectiveness, Legitimacy and Police Strategies Explain Variations in
Collective Efficacy Across Urban Neighborhoods?
Elise Sargeant, University of Queensland
Discussant:
Lorraine Mazerolle, University of Queensland
SESSION 752: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: MEET THE EDITORS PART II - CURRENT
ISSUES AND DIRECTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Michael Rocque, Northeastern University
Discussants:
D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
Rosemary Gartner, University of Toronto
Thomas G. Blomberg, Florida State University
328
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 753: NEW DIRECTIONS IN GANG COMPOSITION RESEARCH
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Cheryl Maxson, University of California, Irvine
The Racial/Ethnic Composition of Gangs
Adrienne Freng, University of Wyoming
Dena Carson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Sex Composition of Gangs and Members’ Victimization
Dana Peterson, University at Albany, SUNY
Dena Carson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Boys by Day: Gang Sexual Orientation Composition's Effects on Gay Gang Members' Activities and Experiences
Vanessa R. Panfil, University at Albany, SUNY
Discussant:
Cheryl Maxson, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 754: OCCUPY CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Deborah Landry, University of Ottawa
Talking about a Revolution: Tahrir Square, Indignados, Occupy, and the Cultural Politics of Global Solidarity
Cécile Van de Voorde, IHL Consulting
Carl Root, University of South Florida
Occupy Policing: The Repression of the Occupy Movement and Radical Alternatives to Policing
Stanislav Vysotsky, Willamette University
Social Institutions and Occupy Wall Street: Examining Police Response
Ashley K. Farmer, University of Delaware
Benigno Aguirre, University of Delaware
Discussant:
Deborah Landry, University of Ottawa
TRIBUTE SESSION
SESSION 755: JAMES F. SHORT, JR.: A TRIBUTE
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
Chair:
Robert J. Sampson, Harvard University
Participants
Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie Mellon University
Robert Bursik, University of Missouri - St. Louis
James C. ("Buddy") Howell, National Gang Center / Institute for Intergovernmental Research
Lorine Hughes, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
James F. Short, Jr., Washington State University
329
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 756: TRAFFICKING IN PERSONS FOR LABOR EXPLOITATION IN THE UNITED
STATES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michael Shively, Abt Associates Inc.
Looking for a Hidden Population: Measuring Labor Trafficking in a Border County
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
Brian Finch, San Diego State University
Understanding the Organization, Operation, and Victimization of Labor Trafficking in the U.S.
Colleen Owens, The Urban Institute
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
Amy Farrell, Northeastern University
Jack McDevitt, Northeastern University
Identifying Indicators of Labor Trafficking of Human Beings
Kelle Barrick, RTI International
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
Discussant:
Michael Shively, Abt Associates Inc.
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 757: EXPLORING JUVENILE JUSTICE ISSUES THROUGH A COMMUNITY LENS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer L. Jensen, Vera Institute of Justice / Rutgers University
Stop, Question, and Frisk in New York City
Brenda J. Velazquez, Vera Institute of Justice
Ashley Jackson, Vera Institute of Justice
Jennifer Fratello, Vera Institute of Justice
Sydney McKinney, Vera Institute of Justice
Andres F. Rengifo, Rutgers University
The Impact of School Climate and Policy on Delinquency and Justice System Careers
Julia Kennard, Vera Institute of Justice
Nicholas Wical, Vera Institute of Justice
Reagan Daly, Vera Institute of Justice
Disproportionate Minority Contact: Understanding the Perspectives of Youth and Community Members
Jennifer L. Jensen, Vera Institute of Justice / Rutgers University
Jennifer Fratello, Vera Institute of Justice
Nicholas Wical, Vera Institute of Justice
Discussant:
Andres F. Rengifo, Rutgers University
330
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 758: THE OFFICE OF JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY PREVENTION
RESEARCH RESOURCES: OPPORTUNITIES FOR FUNDING, PUBLICATION, AND DATA
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brecht Donoghue, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
OJJDP Research Funding Opportunities
Brecht Donoghue, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
OJJDP Sponsored Journal of Juvenile Justice
Monica Robbers, CSR Incorporated / Marymount University
OJJDP Youth under Supervision Data Collections
Janet Chiancone, Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 759: THE UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES OF SOCIAL MIX: IMPLICATIONS FOR
SOCIAL NETWORKS, COLLECTIVE EFFICACY, CRIME AND VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
Chair:
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
Engineering Change: The "Social Mix" Policy , Its Theoretical Assumptions, and Its Implications for Crime and Violence Prevention
Luca Berardi, University of Toronto
Declining Crime Rates in Canada’s Largest Social Housing Project: A Story about Collective Efficacy and Cultural Capital
Sara K. Thompson, Ryerson University
The Unintended Consequences of Social Mix: Effects on Residents’ Networks, Participation in Community Matters, and Community
Cohesion
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
Sara K. Thompson, Ryerson University
Social Mix and Its Implications for Crime and Violence
Mark Luguya, University of Toronto
Sandra M. Bucerius, University of Toronto
Sara K. Thompson, Ryerson University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 760: USING DATA FROM THE PATHWAYS TO DESISTANCE STUDY
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
The Pathways to Desistance Study: Design and Methods
Edward P. Mulvey, University of Pittsburgh
The Pathways to Desistance Study: Measures over Time
Carol A. Schubert, University of Pittsburgh
Using the Data to Examine Developmental Trends
Robert Brame, University of North Carolina at Charlotte
Using the Data to Assessing Policy Impact
Thomas A. Loughran, University of Maryland
Discussant:
Daniel Nagin, Carnegie Mellon University
331
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 761: NEIGHBORHOOD CONTEXTUAL INFLUENCES ON SUBSTANCE USE AND
VICTIMIZATION: FINDINGS FROM THE PROJECT ON HUMAN DEVELOPMENT IN CHICAGO
NEIGHBORHOODS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
The Influence of Neighborhood Cultural Norms and Individual Attitudes on Adolescent Delinquency
Emily Wright, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
Unstructured Time Use: A Multi-Level Investigation of the Role of Collective Efficacy, Low Self-Control, and Routine Activities in
Adolescent Substance Use
John Michael Eassey, University of Florida
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Human Agency, Street Efficacy, and Violent Victimization Among Youth: A Study of Urban Disadvantaged Neighborhoods
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
Kelsey Antle, University of Florida
Multi-Level Risk and Protective Factors for School Victimization in Middle Childhood
Holly Foster, Texas A&M University
Jeanne Brooks-Gunn, Columbia University
Discussant:
Chris Gibson, University of Florida
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 762: QUASI-EXPERIMENTAL METHODS IN POLICING AND CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Using Spatial and Temporal Discontinuities to Evaluate the Effect of Police Strength on Crime
Ben Grunwald, University of Pennsylvania
John M. MacDonald, University of Pennsylvania
The Effect of Hot Spots Policing in NYC on Crime and Racial Disparities in Stop Outcomes
Jeff Fagan, Columbia University
John M. MacDonald, University of Pennsylvania
Crime, Policing, and Enforcement Spillover
Amanda Geller, Columbia University
Jeff Fagan, Columbia University
Secondary Effects and Pot: The Effects of Medical Marijuana Dispensaries on Neighborhoods in San Jose
George E. Mohler, Santa Clara University
George Tita, University of California, Irvine
Giulia Berlusconi, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Matthew Valasik, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 763: CRIME AND PLACE: FORMAL AND INFORMAL GUARDIANSHIP
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Maud van Bavel, NSCR / VU University
332
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Exploring the Relationship between Formal and Informal Guardians in Different Neighbourhoods
Maud van Bavel, NSCR / VU University
Henk Elffers, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Danielle M. Reynald, Griffith University
A Quasi-Experimental Evaluation of Near Repeat Surveillance as a Method of Crime Prevention
Henk Elffers, Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Guillaume Beijers, VU University Amsterdam
Jasper van der Kemp, VU University Amsterdam
Marlijn Peeters, Ghent University
Testing the Effect of a Dedicated Team of Patrol Units Dispatched by Video Surveillance Operators: A Randomized Control Trial
Eric L. Piza, Rutgers University
Joel M. Caplan, Rutgers University
Leslie W. Kennedy, Rutgers University
The Guardianship Survey: Exploring the Differences between Silent versus Active Crime Witnesses
Danielle M. Reynald, Griffith University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 764: HOW CAN VIOLENCE BE REDUCED AT A GLOBAL SCALE?
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Recent Long-Term Violence Reductions in Non-Western and Developing Countries: Are there any Commonalities?
Amy Elizabeth Nivette, University of Cambridge
World Health Organization and Violence Prevention Alliance: Global Plan of Action for Violence Prevention 2012-2020
Robert Alexander Butchart, World Health Organization
Christopher Mikton, World Health Organization
Alessandra Guedes, Pan American Health Organization
How to Reduce Global Homicide Rates by 70 Percent
Manuel Peter Eisner, University of Cambridge
Discussant:
Richard Rosenfeld, University of Missouri - St. Louis
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 765: THE IMPACT OF NEW YORK STATE’S ROCKEFELLER DRUG LAW REFORM
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Erin J. Farley, Center for Court Innovation
Analyzing Drug Law Policy Change in New York City: Findings from Administrative Data Analyses
Jim Parsons, Vera Institute of Justice
Qing Wei, Vera Institute of Justice
Analyzing Drug Law Policy Change in New York City: Findings from Interviews and Case File Reviews
Travis Wendel, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Ernest Drucker, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
The Impact of Drug Law Reform on Statewide Treatment and Sentencing Outcomes
Erin J. Farley, Center for Court Innovation
Michael Rempel, Center for Court Innovation
Cost-Benefit Analysis of Judicial Diversion's Impact on Drug Courts in New York State
Michael Finigan, NPC Research
333
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 766: THE ROLE OF INTERPERSONAL BEHAVIOR IN DIVERSE POLICING CONTEXTS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Louise Porter, Griffith University
Indigenous Deaths in Police Custody and Custody-Related Operations
Louise Porter, Griffith University
Misunderstandings as a Challenge in Cross-Cultural Police-Civilian Interactions
Paul Taylor, Lancaster University, UK
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 767: EVIDENCE-BASED CRIME POLICY III
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Jonathan Shepherd, Cardiff University
Bullying Perpetration and Victimization as Risk Factors for Drug Use Later in Life
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Maria M. Ttofi, Cambridge University
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
Protective Factors that Interrupt Continuity from School Bullying to Later Offending: A Systematic Review
Maria M. Ttofi, Cambridge University
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
Friedrich A. Loesel, University of Cambridge
The Effects of Scared Straight and Similar Juvenile Awareness Programs on Subsequent Delinquency: An Updated Systematic Review
Anthony Petrosino, WestEd
Carolyn Turpin-Petrosino, Bridgewater State University
Julia Lavenberg, University of Pennsylvania
Aftercare Programs for Reducing Recidivism among Juvenile and Young Adult Offenders: A Systematic Review
Chrissy James, University of Amsterdam
Peter H. van der Laan, NSCR / VU University Amsterdam
Geert Jan J.M. Stams, University of Amsterdam
Jessica Asscher, University of Amsterdam
MEETING
SESSION 768: CRIMINOLOGISTS WITHOUT BORDERS (OPEN TO ALL)
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Adams Room, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 769: ASC BUSINESS MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 8, 7th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 770: NATIONAL WHITE COLLAR CRIME CENTER MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
334
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
MEETING
SESSION 771: DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY JOURNAL EDITORIAL BOARD
MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 772: TOWARD A UNIFIED CRIMINOLOGY: INTEGRATING ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT
CRIME, PEOPLE, AND SOCIETY
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Author
Robert Agnew, Emory University
Critics
Richard B. Felson, Pennsylvania State University
Dawn L. Rothe, Old Dominion University
Per-Olof H. Wikstrom, University of Cambridge
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 773: RACE AND JUSTICE: WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS OF AFRICAN AMERICAN
MEN (ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME)
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Authors
Marvin D. Free, University of Wisconsin - Whitewater
Mitch Ruesink, Waukesha County Technical College
Critics
John M. Eason, Arizona State University
Karen F. Parker, University of Delaware
Allison M. Cotton, Metropolitan State College of Denver
SESSION 774: WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS AND THE RELIABILITY OF EYEWITNESS
IDENTIFICATION
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Anita Kalunta-Crumpton, Texas Southern University
Predicting Wrongful Convictions: A Quantitative, Case-Control Analysis of Risk Factors Using Data from the UK
William Schmidt, University of Cambridge
Application of Manson Criteria in the U.S. Courts of Appeals: A Decade of Eyewitness Evidence in the Lower Courts
Mai E. Naito, Sam Houston State University
Eyewitness Identification Issues as Reflected in Recent Appellate Court Opinions
Rick M. Steinmann, University of South Florida - Tampa
Implementing Best Practices in Eyewitness Identification Procedures as a Matter of Due Process
Dyan McGuire, Saint Louis University
SESSION 775: PLEA BARGAINING, JUROR DECISION MAKING AND POST-CONVICTION
SUPERVISION
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kristin Winokur Early, Justice Research Center
335
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Negotiating Justice: Defendant Perspectives of Plea Bargaining and Court Processing
Jeanette Marie Hussemann, University of Minnesota
An Examination of the Effects of Post-Venire Publicity on Juror Decision-making
Tarika Daftary-Kapur, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Maureen O'Connor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Steven Penrod, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Supervised Release: The Forgotten Footnote in Federal Sentencing
Christine Scott-Hayward, Columbia Law School
SESSION 776: RACE, IMMIGRATION, AND FEAR OF CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Brent Teasdale, Georgia State University
In-Group Fear and Changing Attitudes towards Immigration as a Result of September 11th
Jared S. Rosenberger, University of Akron
Michael Steiner, University of Akron
Racial Differences in Socialization about Crime: Impacts on Personal Fear
Ashley Price, University of Florida
Jodi Lane, University of Florida
Scarface Redux: Evolution of the Narco-Migrant Frame in the Twentieth Century
Saran Ghatak, Keene State College
Niall Moran, Keene State College
SESSION 777: PRISONER REENTRY FOR WOMEN III
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Geniece A. Crawford, Harvard University
Staying Out or Going Back: Re-Entry Experiences of Women Prisoners
Susan F. Sharp, University of Oklahoma
Juanita Ortiz, University of Illinois Springfield
Substance Using Women Returning Home from Jail: Perceived Barriers to Treatment in the Community
Thomas P. LeBel, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Susan J. Rose, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Audrey L. Begun, Ohio State University
The Trial after Imprisonment: How Ex-Offender Mothers Rationalize Criminal Activity Post-Release
Geniece A. Crawford, Harvard University
SESSION 778: VICTIMIZATION ACROSS SEXUAL CONTEXTS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kelly Stout, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Examining Coercion and Harm in a BDSM Subculture
Karen Holt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Exotic Dancing, College Students, and Victimization
Jeremy Smith, Sam Houston State University
Sexual Behavior in Sin City
M. Alexis Kennedy, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Katherine Hertlein, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Tara Emmers-Sommer, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
336
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Sexual Harassment: The Intersectionality of Gender and Race
Janice Joseph, Richard Stockton College of New Jersey
Sexual Harassment of Men
Kelly Stout, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
M. Alexis Kennedy, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
SESSION 779: NEW APPROACHES IN BIOSOCIAL CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Anthony W. Hoskin, University of Texas of the Permian Basin
Adolescent Predictors of Adult Deviance: A Test of the Gene-Environment Interaction Hypothesis
Marie Angela Ratchford, Florida State University / Journal of Drug Issues
Behavioral Biogenetics in Clinical Criminology: Problems and Prospects
Gabriele Rocca, University of Genoa, Italy
Alfredo Verde, University of Genoa, Italy
Courts' Increasing Consideration of Behavioral Genetics Evidence in Criminal Cases: Results of a Longitudinal Study
Deborah Denno, Fordham Law School
Criminality and the 2D:4D Digit Ratio: Evidence of Prenatal Androgen Influences
Anthony W. Hoskin, University of Texas of the Permian Basin
Lee Ellis, Minot State University
SESSION 780: THE SPATIAL CONTEXT OF VICTIMIZATION
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Lior Gideon, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Ecological Correlates of Sex Trafficking in Oklahoma
Constance Chapple, University of Oklahoma
Meredith Worthen, University of Oklahoma
Is Victimization Induced, Indirectly?
Dalisha K. Carmichael, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Lawrence Kelly, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Social Support and Perceptions of Community Safety: Preliminary Data
Lior Gideon, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 781: REDUCING RACIAL DISPARITIES IN JUVENILE JUSTICE SYSTEMS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Marcia Cohen, Development Services Group, Inc.
Specifying the Mechanisms that Contribute to DMC
Dusten Hollist, University of Montana - Missoula
Normalizing Minority Overrepresentation: Juvenile Justice along the U.S. and Mexico Border
Robert J. Durán, New Mexico State University
Carlos E. Posadas, New Mexico State University
An Exploratory Analysis of Disproportionate Minority Contact in Predominately Minority Populated Counties
Chenelle A. Jones, Texas Southern University
Measuring Changing Patterns of Racial Disparities in the Juvenile Justice System: Where is the Improvement Occurring?
William Feyerherm, Portland State University
Marcia Cohen, Development Services Group, Inc.
Rachel Stephenson, Development Services Group, Inc.
337
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Elizabeth Spinney, Development Services Group, Inc.
Martha Yeide, Development Services Group, Inc.
DMC Case Studies: Jurisdictions Successful in Reducing Racial Disparities in their Juvenile Justice Systems
Marcia Cohen, Development Services Group, Inc.
Elizabeth Spinney, Development Services Group, Inc.
William Feyerherm, Portland State University
Rachel Stephenson, Development Services Group, Inc.
Martha Yeide, Development Services Group, Inc.
SESSION 782: JURY DECISION MAKING IN DEATH PENALTY CASES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ross Kleinstuber, University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown
Analyzing the Death Decision
Mari Pierce, Pennsylvania State University, Beaver
Tina L. Freiburger, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Does Mental Health Mitigating Evidence Make a Difference to Jurors in Capital Sentencing Decisions?
Leona Deborah Jochnowitz, University at Albany, SUNY
Racial Differences among Capital Jurors: Empathy, Trust in Government, and Retributive Attitudes
Wanda Foglia, Rowan University
“We’re All Born with Equal Opportunities and Equal Choices”: Hegemonic Individualism and Jurors’ Receptivity to Mitigation
Ross Kleinstuber, University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown
SESSION 783: SOCIAL LEARNING THEORY AND CRIME/DEVIANCE
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Joshua Smallridge, Fairmont State University
Innovation and Differential Association Theory
Kristopher Proctor, Stanford University
Social Learning in Context: Group Homies, Free Arts, and the Modeling of Roles
Gabriel T. Cesar, Arizona State University
Digital Piracy and Online Sources of Social Learning
Joshua Smallridge, Fairmont State University
SESSION 784: STRATEGIES FOR MANAGING SEXUAL OFFENDERS
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Denise D. Nation, Winston-Salem State University
Civil Commitment of Sexually Violent Offenders: Who Uses It and How?
Georgianna Brain, Old Dominion University
Parole Officers’ Perceptions of Sex Offender Subtypes
Danielle Bailey, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Lisa Sample, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Technological Innovations and the Community Control of Sex Offenders
James Byrne, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Donald Rebovich, Utica College
Treatment, Reentry, and Management of Sex Offenders
John Charles Navarro, Illinois State University
Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Illinois State University
338
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 785: VICTIMS, EQUITY, AND JUSTICE IN ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Kimberly L. Barrett, University of South Florida
Environmental Crime Victimization in the United States: Exploring Federal Criminal Prosecutions, 2001-11
Melissa L. Jarrell, Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi
Joshua Ozymy, Texas A&M University - Corpus Christi
Environmental Equity: An Assessment of the Impacts of Uranium Mining
Jessica Fry, Michigan State University
School Segregation, Income, and Environmental Hazards: An Environmental Justice Study in Western New York
Kimberly L. Barrett, University of South Florida
Lyndsay N. Boggess, University of South Florida
SESSION 786: CRITICAL PERSPECTIVES ON JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Peter Brandon Kraska, Eastern Kentucky University
Medicine as Means: Medical Ethics within the Criminal Justice Framework
Emmanuelle Klossou, Northeastern University
Contextualizing Lessons Learned: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Executive Clemency
Stephanie Batcheller, New York State Defenders Association
Catherine Cerulli, University of Rochester Medical Center
The Dynamics of Compliance with Community Sentences: A Critical Analysis
Pamela Ugwudike, Swansea University
Militarization: A Critical Criminological Framework
Peter Brandon Kraska, Eastern Kentucky University
SESSION 787: VARIATIONS IN INCARCERATION AMONG NATION-STATES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Olena Antonaccio, University of Miami
Institutional Anomie and Cross-National Differences in Incarceration Rates
Douglas B. Weiss, University of Maryland, College Park
Sumit Kumar, University of Maryland
Is Canada Adopting the U.S.’ Tough-On-Crime Approach? Testing a Harbinger of Mass Incarceration
Daiwon Lee, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Lila Kazemian, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Mass Prison Releases in the United States and South Africa
Susan Smith-Cunnien, University of St. Thomas
Paths Not Taken: An Examination of Crime Politics in California's Prison Boom Era
Michael C. Campbell, Northern Illinois University
SESSION 788: INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH ON DRUG USE, DEALING, AND CONTROL II
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Rebecca Hill, CUNY Graduate Center
Changing Drug Use Subculture in China: An Ethnographic Study of Female Club Drug Users
Huan Gao, California State University, Stanislaus
339
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Female Drug Offender Program in Japan
Hiroko Goto, Chiba University Law School
The Determinants of Youth Drug and Alcohol Use: The Kyrgyzstan Case
Erlan Bakiev, Zirve University
Bekchoro Aliiaskarov, Turkish National Police Academy
Substance Use among Russian Immigrants in Brighton Beach
Rebecca Hill, CUNY Graduate Center
SESSION 789: EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH IN CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Salon 7, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jan W. de Keijser, Leiden University
Enhancing Restitution Compliance: An Experimental Approach
Brendan Lantz, Pennsylvania State University
Andrew Gladfelter, Pennsylvania State University
R. Barry Ruback, Pennsylvania State University
A Case Study of Implementing a State-Wide Randomized Experimental Design to Evaluate Prison-Based Substance Abuse Treatment
Programs
Samuel Joseph Scaggs, Florida State University
David Ensley, Florida Department of Corrections
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Catie Lynn Clark, Florida State University
Philip Coltharp, Florida Department of Corrections
Using a Crime Harm Index as a Prediction Tool: The Development of a U.K. Offender-Based Harm Index
Peter William Neyroud, University of Cambridge
Lawrence W. Sherman, Cambridge University / University of Maryland
Ioana Cosma, University of Cambridge
Human Experiments in Virtual Environments: The Virtual Surveillance Lab
Stephane Leman-Langlois, Laval University
"Voice Your View": Feelings and Experiences of Crime and Incivility among Young People
Ryan Aaron Davenport, University College London
Will Simm, University of Lancaster
SESSION 790: ROUNDTABLE: CURRENT ISSUES IN FEDERAL SENTENCING: FAST-TRACK
PROGRAMS FOR IMMIGRATION OFFENSE
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Shawn Bushway, University at Albany, SUNY
Organizational Efficiency and Sentencing Disparity in Federal Sentencing
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
Discussants:
Max Schanzenbach, Northwestern University
Jeffery T. Ulmer, Pennsylvania State University
SESSION 791: ROUNDTABLE: HOMICIDE AND MAJOR CRIME INVESTIGATION: NEW
INSIGHTS AND FUTURE CHALLENGES
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chairs:
Fiona Jane Brookman, University of Glamorgan
Edward Maguire, American University
340
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Factors Associated with Homicide Clearances
Charles F. Wellford, University of Maryland
Forensic Evidence and Solvability of Major Crimes
Michael D. White, Arizona State University
David Schroeder, University of New Haven
The Communication and Use of Forensic Information by Investigators in Major Crimes
William R. King, Sam Houston State University
Homicide Investigation in the U.K.: Investigative Challenges and Routine Errors in "Near Miss" Cases
Fiona Jane Brookman, University of Glamorgan
Homicide Investigation in Trinidad and Tobago
Edward Maguire, American University
Investigative Errors
Kim Rossmo, Texas State University
SESSION 792: ROUNDTABLE: JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY I
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Analysis of Exit Interviews Conducted with Family Therapy Clients and Their Guardians
Katarzyna Celinska, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Child Welfare’s Contribution to the Female Delinquency Population: Pathways and Dispositional Outcomes
Yu-Ling Chiu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Decision Time: Foundations of Juvenile Court Judges' Disposition Decisions
Brian James Smith, Central Michigan University
Mental Health Disorders in Justice System Juveniles: Referral to Services and Recidivism in Adolescence and Young Adulthood
Machteld Hoeve, Columbia University / University of Amsterdam
Larkin S. McReynolds, Columbia University
Gail A. Wasserman, Columbia University
Probation Officers’ Perceptions of Juvenile Justice and Attitudes toward Juvenile Offenders in Finland and the United States
Kristina Katarina Westerholm, University of Helsinki
SESSION 793: ROUNDTABLE: LINEAR TRANSFORMATIONS AND THEIR ADAPTABILITY INTO
CRIMINAL JUSTICE MODEL BUILDING
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Corey R. Carlson, Prairie View A&M University
Discussants:
Karissa Rodriguez, Prairie View A&M University
Joseph O. Ugwu, Prairie View A&M University
SESSION 794: FIREARMS AVAILABILITY, ACCESS, AND CARRYING
Friday, November 16 - 2:00 pm to 3:20 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Amanda D. Emmert, University at Albany, SUNY
An Examination of the Illegal Firearm Availability and Violent Crime in an Urban City
Sung-suk Violet Yu, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Jesenia Pizarro, Michigan State University
Predictors of Continuity and Change in Ready Access to a Household Firearm among Adolescents
Adam Watkins, Bowling Green State University
341
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Understanding Adolescent Weapon Carrying Behavior
Amanda D. Emmert, University at Albany, SUNY
Alan J. Lizotte, University at Albany, SUNY
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 795: NEW FINDINGS AND EXPLANATIONS FOR VICTIMIZATION AMONG
HISPANICS/LATINOS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Reporting Violence against Women: A Focus on Hispanic Victimization
Callie Marie Rennison, University of Colorado - Denver
Cultural Influences on the Victimization of Latino Adolescents
Chiara Sabina, Pennsylvania State University, Harrisburg
Carlos A. Cuevas, Northeastern University
Opportunity, Ethnicity, and Adolescent Violence: School-Based Victimization and the Relevance of School Demographic Context
Anthony A. Peguero, Virginia Tech
Edwardo L. Portillos, University of Colorado - Colorado Springs
Juan Carlos González, California State University, Fresno
Victimization at the Convergence of Race, Ethnicity, and Criminal Opportunities
Arelys Madero-Hernandez, University of Cincinnati
Bonnie Fisher, University of Cincinnati
Pamela Wilcox, University of Cincinnati
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 796: POLICE ORGANIZATIONAL INFLUENCES AND OUTCOMES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
William Terrill, Michigan State University
Organizational Context and Officer Occupational Attitudes: A Multilevel Test of Workgroup Composition and Workgroup Diversity
Jason R. Ingram, Illinois State University
William Terrill, Michigan State University
Policing in an Environment of Increased Workload Demand
William Terrill, Michigan State University
Michael Rossler, Michigan State University
The Effect of Daily Police Workloads on Crime Clearance
Aki Roberts, University of New Mexico
John M. Roberts, University of New Mexico
The Invisible Gatekeepers of Law Enforcement: Police Dispatcher Decision Making and its Influence on 911 Call Outcomes
Carlena A. Orosco, Temple University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 797: CONTEMPORARY APPROACHES TO LATIN@ CRIMINOLOGY II
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Gary Gutierez, Inter Ponce
342
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Implementation of Gang-Control Collaborative Projects in Utah: The Experience of a Latino Research Partner
Moises Prospero, IE Consulting, LLC
Policing the Social Landscape of the Inner City: Minority Youth’s Perceptions of Crime and Law Enforcement
Xavier Perez, Saint Xavier University
Arrest Risk by Latino Ethnicity in the U.S.
Mike Tapia, University of Texas at San Antonio
Holly Ventura Miller, University of Texas at San Antonio
From a Colonial Regime to the New Law and Order Society in Puerto Rico
Gary Gutierez, Inter Ponce
SESSION 798: STUDENTS MEET SCHOLARS: GENDER AND CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Gatewood Owens, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Discussants:
Freda Adler, University of Pennsylvania
Sally Simpson, University of Maryland
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Jennifer Cobbina, Michigan State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 799: ZOMBIE CRIMINOLOGY: CAN A NATION-CENTRIC DISCIPLINE SURVIVE A
GLOBALIZED WORLD CONTEXT?
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nancy A. Wonders, Northern Arizona University
New Analytic Tools for a Global Criminology
Nancy A. Wonders, Northern Arizona University
What Austerity Measures and Structural Adjustment Programs Mean for Criminology
Kimberlee G. Waggoner, Old Dominion University
Mona J. Danner, Old Dominion University
Criminalizing the Undocumented: Using Social Services as a Sifting Mechanism of Control
Luis A. Fernandez, Northern Arizona University
Bodies that Matter: Criminology and Untenable Life in an Era of Global Danger
Meghan McDowell, Arizona State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 800: MOTORCYCLE OUTLAWS? BIKER IDENTITIES, NARRATIVES AND
CONSUMPTION
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephen Muzzatti, Ryerson University
Riding on the Edge: Sportbikes, Speed and Transgressive Pleasure
Stephen Muzzatti, Ryerson University
343
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Doin’ It In the Dirt: Adventure Touring and the Cultural Contradictions of Off-Road Edgework
Raymond Joseph Michalowski, Northern Arizona University
Iron Triangle Wrapped in Leather? Political Economy, Strange Bedfellows, and Power
Donna Selman, Eastern Michigan University
Facebooking Bikers: Outlaw Motorcycle Clubs and the Digital Divide
Chris Richardson, University of Western Ontario
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 801: THE AMERICAN PRISON: IMAGINING A DIFFERENT FUTURE II
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Cheryl Lero Jonson, Northern Kentucky University
The Safe Prison
Benjamin Steiner, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Benjamin Meade, University of South Carolina
The Healthy Prison
Roberto Hugh Potter, University of Central Florida
Jeffrey W. Rosky, University of Central Florida
The Private Prison
Kevin Wright, Arizona State University
The Small Prison
Cheryl Lero Jonson, Northern Kentucky University
John Eck, University of Cincinnati
Francis T. Cullen, University of Cincinnati
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 802: CRITICAL EXPLORATIONS IN CONTEMPORARY PENALITY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Chris Cunneen, James Cook University
Human Rights and Penal Violence in the Youth Justice Sphere: Contested Discourses and Contradictory Narratives - Global, National,
and Local
Barry Goldson, University of Liverpool
Global Convictism and Colonialism in the History of Penality
David Brown, University of New South Wales, Australia
Chris Cunneen, James Cook University
Locking up the Marginalized: Mental and Cognitive Disability and Prison
Eileen Baldry, University of New South Wales, Australia
Indigenous Women: Missing Subjects of Penal Discourse and Penal Politics
Julie Stubbs, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 803: NEWS MEDIA COVERAGE OF HOMICIDE
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Vikas Kumar Gumbhir, Gonzaga University
344
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
Atypical and A Typical Homicide: Testing A Reporter’s Decision To Publish
Jaclyn Schildkraut, Texas State University - San Marcos
Amy Donley, University of Central Florida
Marie Gualtieri, University of Central Florida
Homicide in the News: A Mixed Methods Approach to Explaining Media Distortion
Laura Davie, University of North Florida
Media Coverage of Capital Murder: Exceptions Sustain the Rule
Jeffrey Lin, University of Denver
Scott Phillips, University of Denver
Monster Dearest: The Social Construction of Serial Killers
Scott A. Bonn, Drew University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 804: SPATIAL ANALYSIS OF VIOLENCE AND ALCOHOL OUTLETS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Aleksandra J. Snowden, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Underlying Risk in Spatial Analysis: Comparing the Suitability of Densities, Rates, and Cumulative Counts in the Ecological Study of
Homicide Victimization
Gipsy Escobar, Loyola University Chicago
Using Spatial Optimization Modeling to Examine Alcohol Beverage Control and to Estimate Future Dispersion of Alcohol Outlets
William Alex Pridemore, Indiana University
Tony Grubesic, Drexel University
Alan T. Murray, Arizona State University
Loni Philip Tabb, Drexel University
Yin Liu, Arizona State University
Ran Wei, Arizona State University
Alcohol Outlets and Assaults in a College Town: Accounting for Immediate Environment Characteristics
Aleksandra J. Snowden, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 805: SPATIAL CRIMINOLOGY IN CHINA
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Shanhe Jiang, University of Toledo
Spatial Studies in Criminology and Criminal Justice
Shuming Bao, University of Michigan
Development of Spatial Criminology and Sociology Lab
Deping Xiang, Central China Normal University
Spatial Analysis and Its Application in Criminology in China
Han Yu, Northwest Missouri State University
Shanhe Jiang, University of Toledo
Spatial Criminology in China: Review and Prospect
Xinyue Ye, Bowling Green State University
Shanhe Jiang, University of Toledo
Shuming Bao, University of Michigan
345
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 806: GPS MONITORING TECHNOLOGIES AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE: AN
EVALUATION STUDY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Peggy "Margaret" Conway, Journal of Offender Monitoring
Programs Utilizing GPS Electronic Monitoring Technologies in Cases of Domestic Violence during Pretrial: Results from a National
Survey of Practitioners
Oren M. Gur, University of Illinois at Chicago
Edna Erez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Peter R. Ibarra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Varieties of Implementation: The Case of GPS for Domestic Violence
Peter R. Ibarra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Edna Erez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Oren M. Gur, University of Illinois at Chicago
The Impact of Electronic Monitoring Placement and Duration on Outcomes among Domestic Violence Defendants
Bill Bales, Florida State University
Peter R. Ibarra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Edna Erez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Oren M. Gur, University of Illinois at Chicago
Experiencing GPS Monitoring for Domestic Violence: Interviews with Victims and Defendants
Edna Erez, University of Illinois at Chicago
Peter R. Ibarra, University of Illinois at Chicago
Oren M. Gur, University of Illinois at Chicago
Bill Bales, Florida State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 807: SENTENCING JUVENILES IN ADULT COURT: CONSIDERATIONS AND
CONSEQUENCES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Megan C. Kurlychek, University at Albany, SUNY
Jurisdictional Jeopardy: The Disparate Impact of Juvenile Transfer Laws and the Meaning for American Youth
Megan C. Kurlychek, University at Albany, SUNY
Adolescent Criminal Responsibility and Sentencing Policy: Roper, Graham, Miller/Jackson, and the Youth Discount
Barry C. Feld, University of Minnesota
Assessing the Impact of Plea Bargaining in Waiver Decisions Using a Sample of Serious and Violent Juvenile Delinquents
John D. Burrow, University of South Carolina
Juvenile Status and Sentence Severity: Does it Matter in the Adult System?
Kareem L. Jordan, University of Central Florida
Discussant:
Justin T. Pickett, University at Albany, SUNY
346
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 808: THE INTERPLAY OF ACTIVITY FIELDS, ROUTINE ACTIVITIES, AND RISKY
SITUATIONS ON CRIME AND VIOLENCE
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Psychological Traits, Routine Activities, and Activity Fields
Ronald Simons, University of Georgia
Ashley Barr, University of Georgia
How the Nature of Violence is Affected by the Relative Status of Opponents
Rosemary Gartner, University of Toronto
Elizabeth Griffiths, Rutgers University
Carolyn Yule, University of Guelph
Gettin’ High, Livin’ in the Fast Lane, and Economic Crime
Richard B. Felson, Pennsylvania State University
D. Wayne Osgood, Pennsylvania State University
Patrick Cundiff, Pennsylvania State University
Craig Wiernik, Ohio University
Discussant:
Mark Berg, Indiana University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 809: TRADITIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME IN THE MODERN WORLD II
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 6, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Dina Siegel, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
Traditional Crime in the Modern World: How Triad Societies Respond to Socioeconomic Change
Wing Lo, City University of Hong Kong
Chinatown Tongs in America: Continuity and Opportunities
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
Adapting to Changes in the Social, Economic, and Political Environment after a 25-year Prosecution Effort
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
Discussant:
Henk Van de Bunt, Erasmus University Rotterdam
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 810: THE TRIPLE BOTTOM LINE: PEOPLE, PLANET, AND PROFIT IN CORRECTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Bobby Clark, Sustainable Business Ventures
Save $1,000 per Inmate
Paul Sheldon, Natural Capitalism Solutions
The Triple Bottom Line: People, Planet, and Profit in Corrections
Leah Morgan, Vera Institute of Justice
Green Entrepreneurship
Bobby Clark, Sustainable Business Ventures
347
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
MEETING
SESSION 811: PROPOSED DIVISION OF DEVELOPMENTAL AND LIFE-COURSE
CRIMINOLOGY: ORGANIZATIONAL MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
David P. Farrington, Cambridge University
MEETING
SESSION 812: ASC PUBLICATIONS MEETING
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Medinah Parlor, 6th Floor
MEETING
SESSION 813: ISSUES OF ACCCJ
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 5:00 pm
Wrigley Parlor, 6th Floor
AUTHORS MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 814: ROUTLEDGE HANDBOOK OF CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY (ORGANIZED BY THE
DIVISION ON CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY)
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University
Authors
Walter S. DeKeseredy, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Molly Dragiewicz, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Critics
Michelle Brown, University of Tennessee
Peter Brandon Kraska, Eastern Kentucky University
Nigel South, University of Essex
SESSION 815: THE CHARACTERISTICS OF THE COURTROOM WORKGROUP AND CASE
OUTCOMES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Patricia Y. Warren, Florida State University
Do Judges’ Experiences and Indelible Traits Influence Sentencing Decisions? New Evidence from Florida
Will Hauser, Florida State University
Ted Chiricos, Florida State University
Gender and Race of the Courtroom Workgroup and Sentencing Outcomes: Examining Two Competing Theories
Claire Turner, Florida State University
Wanda Leal, Florida State University
Christi Falco, Florida State University
Impact of Prosecutorial Mindset on Diversionary Court Functioning
Melanie Pallone, SUNY Fredonia
Judicial Oversight and Its Effects on Punishment: Revisiting Sentencing Guidelines and Disparities
Patricia Y. Warren, Florida State University
Sonja Siennick, Florida State University
348
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 816: PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF SEX CRIMES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christina Mancini, Florida Atlantic University
Sex Offender Reentry: The Role of Public Opinion
Christina Mancini, Florida Atlantic University
Teens, Sex, and Race: A Test of Regional Differences in Perceptions of Statutory Rape
Sarah Koon-Magnin, University of South Alabama
Stacy Hoskins Haynes, Mississippi State University
R. Barry Ruback, Pennsylvania State University
The Simplicity and Complexity of Public Attitudes Toward Sex Crimes
Laura L. King, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
The Determination of Victim Credibility in Sexual Assault Cases: Discretionary Evaluations by Police Investigators
Bradley A. Campbell, Sam Houston State University
Tasha A. Menaker, Sam Houston State University
William R. King, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 817: MANAGEMENT ISSUES IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri - Kansas City
Administering Punishment: A Longitudinal Case Study of Prison Administrators at Eastern State Penitentiary, 1829–1971
Ashley T. Rubin, University of California, Berkeley
Escapes from Custody and Violence: A Critical Analysis
Bryce Elling Peterson, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Adam Gregory Fera, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Jeff Mellow, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
The Perks of Direct Supervision Inmate Management? An Empirical Analysis of Penal Consciousness across Supervision Styles
Lori Sexton, University of Missouri - Kansas City
SESSION 818: RESPONDING TO SEXUAL ASSAULT
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Cathryn Lavery, Iona College
Sexual Assault Forensic Exam (SAFE) Payment Practice Study: Final Findings
Janine Zweig, Urban Institute
Lisa Newmark, George Mason University
Darakshan Raja, Urban Institute
Megan Denver, Urban Institute
Sexual Assault: Considerations for Measuring Crime Victimization in the Peace Corps
Katrina Baum, National Institute of Justice
Take Back the Date Night: An Examination of Universities’ Preventative Measures of Date Rape
John Harrington, University of Southern Mississippi
Vanessa Woodward, University of Southern Mississippi
O. Hayden Griffin, III, University of Southern Mississippi
Creating a Successful Sexual Assault Training Module for Faculty on College Campuses and Universities
Cathryn Lavery, Iona College
349
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 819: REENTRY, RECIDIVISM, AND DESISTANCE: EXPLORING MECHANISMS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Beth Weaver, University of Strathclyde
Role of the Criminal Justice System in Crime Desistance: the Bristol Integrated Offender Management Scheme
Andrew Eyton Williams, University of Cambridge / Avon and Somerset Constabulary
Barak Ariel, University of Cambridge / Hebrew University
Readiness for Change and Reentry: A Within-Individual Analysis of Recidivism Post-Release from Prison
Erin Orrick, University of Texas at Dallas
Reentry, Employment, and Recidivism among Adult Male Offenders
Danielle Steffey, RTI International / Florida State University
SESSION 820: STUDIES OF CRIME IN NON-METROPOLITAN AREAS AND SCHOOLS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Brenda K. Vollman, Loyola University New Orleans
Explaining Crime in Metropolitan and Non-Metropolitan Communities
Edward Wells, Illinois State University
Ralph A. Weisheit, Illinois State University
Small Town Sexual Violence: A Macro-Criminological Approach
Jeremy Braithwaite, University of California, Irvine
A Multi-Level Examination of the Prevalence of and Environmental Influences on Verbal, Physical and Cyber Bullying
Karla Dhungana, Florida State University
School Violence as Disturbances in the Lifeworld and System
Laci Fiala, Walsh University
SESSION 821: SERIOUS JUVENILE OFFENDERS, LIFE IMPRISONMENT, AND THE DEATH
PENALTY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sanaz Alasti, Lamar University
A New Crime Control Era in the Juvenile Justice System? State-Level Determinants of Blended Sentencing
Shelly Schaefer, Hamline University
Christopher Uggen, University of Minnesota
Eddie O'Brien: The End of Juvenile Justice in Massachusetts?
Kallee Spooner, Bridgewater State University
Richard G. Wright, Bridgewater State University
The Case of David O. and the Denial of Adolescence: The Sentencing of Juveniles to Life and Their Incarceration Late into Adulthood
Simon I. Singer, Northeastern University
Juvenile Death Penalty: The Road to Abolition is Paved with Paradox
Sanaz Alasti, Lamar University
SESSION 822: SOCIAL CONTEXT AND EXPLANATIONS OF DELINQUENCY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jean McGloin, University of Maryland
A Dual-Systems Approach for Understanding Differential Susceptibility to Processes of Peer Influence
Kyle Thomas, University of Maryland
Jean McGloin, University of Maryland
350
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
School Contexts, School Networks, and Illicit Drug Use: Specifying a Multi-Contextual Explanation of Adolescent Substance Use
Chris E. Rees, University at Albany, SUNY
Matt Vogel, University of Missouri - St. Louis
The Influence of Probationers and Parolees on Juvenile Drug Recidivism
Brian Lockwood, Monmouth University
Philip W. Harris, Temple University
The Social and Moral Ecology of Gang Violence: A Comparative Quantitative Assessment
Edward B. Reeves, Morehead State University
Paul D. Steele, Morehead State University
Timothy S. Hare, Morehead State University
SESSION 823: SUBSTANCE USE AND CRIMINOLOGICAL THEORY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jamie J. Fader, University at Albany, SUNY
Divorce, Depression, and Substance Abuse: Using General Strain Theory to Assess the Relationship
Kristie Lynn Afonso, University of Central Florida
Pathways from Victimization to Substance Use among Adolescents
Riane Miller, University of South Carolina
Abigail A. Fagan, Florida State University
Emily Wright, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Examining the Relationship between Nonmedical Use of Prescription Drugs and Victimization
Laura Garnier Dykstra, University of Maryland
Kimberly M. Caldeira, University of Maryland
Kathryn B. Vincent, University of Maryland
Kevin E. O'Grady, University of Maryland
Amelia M. Arria, University of Maryland
Working Smarter, Not Harder: Arrest Avoidance Techniques Used by Active Drug Sellers
Jamie J. Fader, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 824: VIOLENCE: ASSESSING RISK AMONG INCARCERATED POPULATIONS AND
PATHWAYS TO DESISTENCE
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Karen Terry, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Assessing the Role of Placement in Foster Care in the Prediction of Antisocial Behaviors of Incarcerated Serious and Violent Young
Offenders
Lauren F. Freedman, Simon Fraser University
Raymond R. Corrado, Simon Fraser University
Recidivism and Philadelphia Homicide Offenders
Marieke Liem, Harvard University / Leiden University
Margaret Zahn, North Carolina State University
Comparing Desistance from Different Types of Violent Groups
Pete simi, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Bryan Bubolz, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Pharmaceutical Robbery: The Offender Perspective
Tara O'Connor Shelley, Colorado State University
D.J. Rogers, Colorado State University
351
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 825: REGULATORY AND PENAL RESPONSES TO FINANCIAL CRIMES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Cynthia Koller, Shippensburg University
Economic Crime: Structural Conditions and Limits of Penal Control
Klaus Boers, Universitaet Muenster Inst f Kriminalwissenschaften
Financial Crime Control and the Role of Banks: The Public-Private Interface
Rachel Southworth, Cardiff University, UK
The Regulatory Agency That Wasn't: An Exploration of the PCAOB
Jay Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 826: INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE, SEXUAL ASSAULT, AND PREGNANCY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Manish Madan, Michigan State University
When the Bedroom is the Crime Scene in Los Angeles: To What Extent Does Johnson’s Typology Account for Intimate Partner Sexual
Assault?
Eryn Nicole O'Neal, California State University, Los Angeles
Katharine Tellis, California State University, Los Angeles
Cassia Spohn, Arizona State University
Intimate Partner Violence and Unwanted Pregnancy
Walter Forrest, Monash University
Dharmalingam Arunachalam, Monash University
Kannan Navaneetham, Centre for Development Studies, Trivandrum, Kerala, India
“He Tried to Beat the Baby Out of Me”: Maternal Health and Intimate Partner Violence
Angela M. Moe, Western Michigan University
Catherine L. Kothari, Michigan State University
The Relationship between Women’s Empowerment and Sexual Autonomy in India: Implications for Spousal Abuse
Manish Madan, Michigan State University
Mahesh Nalla, Michigan State University
SESSION 827: UNDERSTANDING TERRORIST BEHAVIOR
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 4, 3rd Floor
Chair:
James J.F. Forest, University of Massachusetts Lowell
On the Characteristics and Socio-Psychological Causes of Violent Terror Crime in Xinjiang Province
Guifen Zhao, Chinese People's Public Security University
Political Organizations that Turn to Crime: A Cross-National Comparison
Victor Asal, University at Albany, SUNY
Brian Nussbaum, University at Albany, SUNY
James J.F. Forest, University of Massachusetts Lowell
The Threat from Within: Comparing Domestic Terrorism Incidents in the United States and United Kingdom
Joseph DeLeeuw, Indiana University
Terrorism in Nigeria: The Case of Boko Haram
James J.F. Forest, University of Massachusetts Lowell
352
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 828: GUNS, GANGS, AND CRIME POLICY
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Zavin Nazaretian, Wayne State University
A History of Reactionary Weapons Legislation in the United States
Adam Scott Wandt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Lawrence Kom, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Save Our Streets: Impact Evaluation of a Ceasefire Replication on Gun Violence in Crown Heights, Brooklyn
Sarah Picard Fritsche, Center for Court Innovation
Lenore Cerniglia, Center for Court Innovation
The Theory of the Cease-Fire Public Health Approach to Violent Crime
Charles Ransford, University of Illinois at Chicago
Mobilizing for the Streets: The Organizational Emergence and Maintenance of One Vision One Life
Joseph D. Johnson, Rowan University
David W. Everson, University of Notre Dame
SESSION 829: TECHNOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Salon 9, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Hank J. Brightman, Naval War College
Criminal Justice Online Education: Marketability Questions
John T. Whitehead, East Tennessee State University
Integrating Information Literacy into a Criminal Justice Curriculum
Cindy Stewart, College of Mount St. Joseph
Videoconferencing: An Effective Teaching Strategy in the Criminal Justice Classroom
Michael Bachmann, Texas Christian University
Brittany Bachmann, Texas Christian University
SESSION 830: ROUNDTABLE: INTERNATIONAL/COMPARATIVE CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Criminal Fine Enforcement in Ireland: Realities and Consequences
Sharon Farrell, University of California, Irvine
Cross-National Organized Crime and Control Strategy
Hongyun Chu, Fujian Police College
Genocide and Social Time
Bradley K. Campbell, California State University, Los Angeles
Terrorism: Adaptations and Changes
Mahendra P. Singh, Grambling State University
SESSION 831: ROUNDTABLE: INTEGRATING SONGWRITING, MUSIC, AND SOCIAL JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Terry Carl Cox, Eastern Kentucky University
Kenneth D. Tunnell, Eastern Kentucky University
Edward L.W. Green, Kansas State University
Kevin Martin Stenson, University of Kent / London Metropolitan University
353
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 832: ROUNDTABLE: JUVENILE JUSTICE AND DELINQUENCY II
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
School Resources and Social Support: A Multilevel Analysis in the Strain Tradition
Khirin Carter, University of Iowa
Ten-Year Follow Up of Children Who Deliberately Light Fires
Ian Lambie, University of Auckland
The Effect of MAOA Genotype and Childhood Maltreatment on Delinquency: A Racial Difference
Songyon Shin, Kyonggi University
Ilhong Yun, Chosun University
EuiGab Hwang, Kyonggi University
The Effect of Routine Activity Components on Korean Adolescents’ Revictimization
HyeonJung Kim, Kyonggi University
Selye Lee, Sungkyunkwan University
Yunkyung Kang, Kyonggi University
EuiGab Hwang, Kyonggi University
Trauma, Delinquent Decision-Making, and Gender-Responsive, Trauma-Informed Programming for Adolescent Female Offenders
Brett Johnson Solomon, Santa Clara University
SESSION 833: ROUNDTABLE: PRIVATE AND PUBLIC REACTIONS TO MINORITIES AND THEIR
CRIMES
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Is Lady Justice (Color) Blind? Zero Tolerance, Restorative Practices, and the Rights of Minority Youth in School
Mara Schiff, Florida Atlantic University
Post-Civil Rights Riots, Protests, and Social Movements: Public Responses to Violence against Marginalized People
Laura S. Logan, Kansas State University
The Salience of Skin Tone: Effects on Police Contact
Karletta White, University of Iowa
SESSION 834: ROUNDTABLE: MENTORING UNDERGRADUATES IN RESEARCH AND
SCHOLARSHIP
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Hartsfield, Bridgewater State University
Discussants:
Allison Foley, Augusta State University
Amaia Iratzoqui, Florida State University
Melencia Johnson, University of South Carolina-Aiken
SESSION 835: SOCIAL CLASS, ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, AND CRIME
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Constance Chapple, University of Oklahoma
Homicide in Chicago: Using Inequality as a Predictor
Melissa Tetzlaff-Bemiller, University of Central Florida
Aaron C. Poole, University of Central Florida
James C. McCutcheon, University of Central Florida
Social-Structural Factors and Spatio-Temporal Burglary Patterns in Chicago Neighborhoods
Yichun Yu, Sam Houston State University
Matt R. Nobles, Sam Houston State University
354
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
The Relationship between Poverty and Income Utilizing Ruby Payne's "A Framework for Understanding Poverty"
Jessica L. Marinez, Texas State University
Classless Criminology?
Charles Reasons, Central Washington University
SESSION 836: THE UNIQUE PROFILES OF GANG MEMBERS
Friday, November 16 - 3:30 pm to 4:50 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Dena Carson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
A Comparison of Gang and Non-Gang Involved Adult Probationers in California’s Agricultural Heartland
James Sutton, Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Jessica Sutton, Sutter County Probation Department
Risk Behavior Profiles of Gang and Non-Gang Youth
Erika Gebo, Suffolk University
Christopher J. Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
What Orange County Gang Unit Officers Think about Gangs, Taggers, and Party Krus
Gregory Chris Brown, California State University, Fullerton
Youth Gangs and Non-Gang Delinquent Peer Groups: What’s the Difference?
Dena Carson, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Finn-Aage Esbensen, University of Missouri - St. Louis
PRESIDENTIAL PLENARY
SESSION 837: ASC PRESIDENTIAL JUSTICE AWARD AND PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS
Friday, November 16 - 5:00 pm to 6:00 pm
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
Chair:
Robert J. Sampson, President, American Society of Criminology, Harvard University
Presidential Justice Award
Chicago Area Project
Introduction
John H. Laub, Director of the National Institute of Justice
Presidential Address: “The Place of Context: A Theory and Strategy for Criminology’s Hard Problems”
Robert J. Sampson, President, American Society of Criminology, Harvard University
PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION
SESSION 838: ASC PRESIDENTIAL RECEPTION
Friday, November 16 - 6:00 pm to 7:00 pm
State Ballroom, 4th Floor
355
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
RECEPTIONS
SESSION 839: FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Adams Room, 6th Floor
SESSION 840: UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND, COLLEGE PARK
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
SESSION 841: DOCTORATE IN CULTURAL AND GLOBAL CRIMINOLOGY (THE DCGC,A
EUROPEAN CONSORTIUM LED BY THE UNIVERSITY OF KENT)
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 842: ARIZONA STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 843: UNIVERSITY OF CINCINNATI
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
SESSION 844: GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Grant Park Parlor, 6th Floor
SESSION 845: AMERICAN UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Hancock Parlor, 6th Floor
SESSION 846: INDIANA UNIVERSITY, BLOOMINGTON
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Harold Washington Suite 9150
SESSION 847: RUTGERS UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Honore Ballroom, Lobby Level
SESSION 848: UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS LOWELL
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 849: KOREAN INSTITUTE OF CRIMINOLOGY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 850: UNIVERSITY OF NEW HAVEN
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
SESSION 851: PENNSYLVANIA STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Monroe Room, 6th Floor
SESSION 852: UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, IRVINE
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Price Room, 5th Floor
SESSION 853: SIMON FRASER UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 1, 3rd Floor
SESSION 854: NORTHEASTERN UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 10, 3rd floor
SESSION 855: JOHN JAY COLLEGE OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 12, 3rd Floor
356
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16
SESSION 856: UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 2, 3rd Floor
SESSION 857: UNIVERSITY OF CAMBRIDGE
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 3, 3rd Floor
SESSION 858: MICHIGAN STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 5, 3rd Floor
SESSION 859: UNIVERSITY AT ALBANY, SUNY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Salon 8, 3rd Floor
SESSION 860: ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
SESSION 861: GEORGE MASON UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
SESSION 862: GRIFFITH UNIVERSITY
Friday, November 16 - 7:00 pm to 9:00 pm
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
MINORITY FELLOWSHIP DANCE CELEBRATION
SESSION 863: MINORITY FELLOWSHIP DANCE FEATURING THE HOT SPOTS
Friday, November 16 - 9:00 pm to 11:00 pm
Grand Ballroom, 4th Floor
SESSION 864: MINORITY FELLOWSHIP DANCE FEATURING MATTHEW SKOLLER BLUE'S
BAND
Friday, November 16 - 10:00 pm to 1:00 am
Red Lacquer Room, 4th Floor
**One ticket purchase will get you in both. The Minority Fellowship Dance is an annual event instituted to affirm the commitment of
ASC to increase the diversity of its membership through the financial support of minority graduate students.
357
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 865: PATTERNS OF TEEN DATING VIOLENCE: VICTIMIZATION AND
PERPETRATION
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Dara Blachman-Demner, National Institute of Justice
The Prevalence of Teen Dating Violence Victimization and Perpetration in Five School Districts in NY, PA and NJ
Pamela Lachman, The Urban Institute
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
Janine Zweig, Urban Institute
Jennifer Yahner, The Urban Institute
Help-Seeking Behavior Among Youth Victims of Dating Abuse
Jennifer Yahner, The Urban Institute
Janine Zweig, Urban Institute
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
Pamela Lachman, The Urban Institute
Teen Dating Violence in the Bronx: What Difference Does a (School) Year Make?
Julia Kohn, Center for Court Innovation
Amanda Cissner, Center for Court Innovation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 866: THE FUTURE OF CAPITAL PUNISHMENT IN THE UNITED STATES
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
Robert M. Bohm, University of Central Florida
Innocence and the Death Penalty: Current Statistics and Exonerations
Talia Harmon, Niagara University
An Update on Lethal Injection Procedures in the U.S.
Gavin Lee, Delta State University
Capital Punishment in Texas: Current Issues
Dennis Longmire, Sam Houston State University
An Overview of Current Issues: Focus on Tennessee
Margaret Vandiver, University of Memphis
Capital Punishment in a Global Context: A Statistical Update
Robert M. Bohm, University of Central Florida
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 867: ENABLERS OF ORGANIZED CRIME
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ernesto Savona, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Money Laundering: Tracing the Real Beneficial Owners of Criminal Transactions and the Role of Professionals as Facilitators
Ernesto Savona, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Michele Riccardi, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
358
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Free Trade Zones as Enablers of Organized Crime
Jianhong Liu, University of Macau
Cybercrime and Internet (In)security
Michael Levi, Cardiff University
Discussants:
David M. Luna, U.S. Department of State
Henk Van de Bunt, Erasmus University Rotterdam
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 868: THE LOS ANGELES GANG REDUCTION AND YOUTH DEVELOPMENT
PROGRAM: EVALUATION AT YEAR THREE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Terence Dunworth, Urban Institute
Identifying At-Risk Youth: The Youth Services Evaluation Tool
Karen Hennigan, University of Southern California
Gang Crime In Los Angeles: 2005 to 2011
David Hayeslip, Urban Institute
Retesting At-Risk Youth in the GRYD Prevention Program: Measuring Progress
Megan Denver, Urban Institute
The Bottom Line: An Overall Assessment of GRYD Program Effects
Terence Dunworth, Urban Institute
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 869: WHY WE DO WHAT WE DO: A REVIEW OF THE SNAP® APPROACH FROM
POLICY TO PRACTICE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Leena Augimeri, Child Development Institute
Tough on Crime Policies at Odds with Early Intervention Research: Position Paper
Deborah Kanter, York University
Sarah Woods, Child Development Institute
Leena Augimeri, Child Development Institute
Margaret Walsh, Child Development Institute
Understanding SNAP®: Transforming Theoretical Underpinnings of an Early Intervention and Crime Prevention Model into Clinical
Practice and Outcomes
Erin Rajca, Child Development Institute
Karen Sewell, Child Development Institute
Leena Augimeri, Child Development Institute
Kathy Levene, Child Development Institute
Margaret Walsh, Child Development Institute
An Evidence-Based Approach for Children Under 12 Focused on Self-Regulation and Self-Control
Leena Augimeri, Child Development Institute
Margaret Walsh, Child Development Institute
359
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
The Cost of Prevention and its Benefits to Society
Margaret Walsh, Child Development Institute
Christopher John Koegl, Ontario Correctional Institute
Leena Augimeri, Child Development Institute
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 870: PRISON ISSUES AND CULTURE IN MEDIA AND SOCIAL DEBATE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kevin Walsh, Aurora University
Exploring the Media’s Role in Perpetuating Negative Stereotypes about Correctional Officers
Sam Vickovic, Arizona State University
Marie L. Griffin, Arizona State University
Hank Fradella, California State University, Long Beach
Playing the 'Treasury Card' to Contest the Prison Idea: Lessons from Canada
Justin Piche, University of Ottawa
The Evolution of Televised Prison Documentaries: From Critical Exposés to Infotainment
Dawn K. Cecil, University of South Florida, St. Petersburg
The Representation of Prison and Criminal Justice in Music
Christian Wickert, Institut für Kriminologische Sozialforschung (IKS), Universität Hamburg
Rebecca Houghton, Institut für Kriminologische Sozialforschung (IKS), Universität Hamburg
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 871: ONTOLOGICAL CRIMINOLOGY
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Negar PourEbrahim Alamdar, York University
Logic of Terror in the Everyday
David N. Baker, Texas Southern University
Hermeneutics as Anarchic Criminology
Livy Anthony Visano, York University
Hybrid Criminalization: Gender, Race and Religion in the Diaspora
Negar PourEbrahim Alamdar, York University
Discussant:
Livy Anthony Visano, York University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 872: SURVIVING PRISON: QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE APPROACHES
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Psychological Adjustment of Prisoners: A Comparison of Methods
Esther F.J.C. van Ginneken, University of Cambridge
Struggles to Survive: The Experience of Canadian Prisoners
Rachelle Larocque, University of Cambridge
The Mitigating Effects of Prison-Based Dog Training Programs on Psychological Survival
Barbara Cooke, University of Cambridge
360
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Stress Coping Mechanisms among Prison Officers in Ghana
Thomas David Akoensi, University of Cambridge
Discussant:
Alison Liebling, Cambridge University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 873: TESTING SELF-CONTROL THEORY: FROM INFANCY TO MIDDLE CHILDHOOD
TO ADOLESCENCE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Stephen Demuth, Bowling Green State University
Early Childhood Predictors of Self-Control
Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State University
Stephen Demuth, Bowling Green State University
Gregory C. Rocheleau, Bowling Green State University
How Important Is Self-Control as a Predictor of Delinquency?
Stephen Demuth, Bowling Green State University
Susan L. Brown, Bowling Green State University
Gregory C. Rocheleau, Bowling Green State University
The Generality of Low Self-Control: Is there a Difference by Gender?
Gregory C. Rocheleau, Bowling Green State University
Nicole A. Shoenberger, Bowling Green State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 874: STEALING SCIENCE: RESEARCH MISCONDUCT AND THE MISUSE OF
SCHOLARLY WORK
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Treating Scholarly Misconduct as Crime
Mark S. Davis, Ohio State University
Lemons to Lemonade: Opportunities in the Analysis of Research Misconduct as Crimes of Specialized Access
Douglas Adams, University of Arkansas
Kenneth D. Pimple, Indiana University Bloomington
Very Wrong but Not Illegal: Law, Ethics, and the Theft of Scholarly Work
Bonnie Berry, Social Problems Research Group
Discussant:
Peter Yeager, Boston University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 875: CULTURAL CRIMINOLOGY: NEW DIRECTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christian University
361
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Tangled Up in Green: Cultural Criminology and Green Criminology
Jeff Ferrell, Texas Christian University
Searchers, Rudeboys, and Terrorist (E)motives: Towards a Cultural Criminology of Terrorism
Keith Hayward, University of Kent
Cultural Criminology: Moving On
Jock Young, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Discussant:
Karen Frances Evans, University of Liverpool
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 876: WOMEN'S OFFENSES AND VICTIMIZATION: EXAMINING INTERNATIONAL
CONTEXTS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Sitawa Kimuna, East Carolina University
Crimes against Women: Gender and Development Contexts
Suvarna Cherukuri, Siena College
Population Based Estimates and Determinants of Sexual Violence Against Women in Kenya
Sitawa Kimuna, East Carolina University
The Handling of Homicide Cases in American Courts: Defense Attorney Negotiations for Justice
Carolyn Field, Edgewood College
Discussant:
Carolyn Field, Edgewood College
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 877: THE FUTURE OF BATTERER PROGRAMS: REASSESSING EVIDENCE-BASED
PRACTICE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Alex Heckert, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Author
Edward Gondolf, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Critics
Larry Bennett, University of Illinois at Chicago
Joanne Belknap, University of Colorado - Boulder
Alex Heckert, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 878: LIFE AFTER DEATH ROW: EXONEREES' SEARCH FOR COMMUNITY AND
IDENTITY
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Author
Saundra Westervelt, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
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SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Critics
Richard Leo, University of San Francisco
Susan F. Sharp, University of Oklahoma
Marvin Zalman, Wayne State University
Discussant:
Kimberly Cook, University of North Carolina Wilmington
SESSION 879: POLICE STYLES, EXPERIENCES, AND APPLICATIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Constance Kostelac, Simpson College
Training for Adaptive Expertise in Police Work: Findings from a Quasi-Experimental Case Study
Charles Scheer, Michigan State University
Understanding the Dimensions of Mobile Technology for Field Officers: Results from a Pilot Test
Jennifer Wood, Temple University
Elizabeth R. Groff, Temple University
Joseph J. O'Rourke, Temple University
Variation in Levels of Civilianization across Large Municipal Police Agencies
Constance Kostelac, Simpson College
SESSION 880: PROBLEM SOLVING COURTS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Tarika Daftary-Kapur, Fairleigh Dickinson University
Four-Year Post-Conviction Recidivism for Multiple DUI Offenders: Alcohol Treatment Court versus a Wait List Comparison Group
Christine Saum, Rowan University
Matthew Hiller, Temple University
Liana Taylor, Temple University
Race and the Imprisonment Decision in Problem-Solving Courts
Samantha Jeffries, Queensland University of Technology
Christine Bond, Queensland University of Technology
The Impact of Drug Court on Public Safety: Seeing the Forest for the Trees
Katie Zafft, University of Maryland, College Park
Brook Kearley, University of Maryland
Therapeutic Jurisprudence: How Judges Operate within Problem-Solving Courts
Jill Viglione, George Mason University
Shannon Portillo, George Mason University
Danielle Rudes, George Mason University
Matthew Nelson, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Veterans Treatment Courts: Discerning National Trends in Dissemination, Structure, and Implementation
Julie Marie Baldwin, University of Florida
SESSION 881: HISTORICAL TRENDS IN PUNISHMENT AND REHABILITATION
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Philip M. Stinson, Bowling Green State University
363
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Transitioning Punishment Philosophies: Dutch Use of Popular Punitivism
Christopher M. Campbell, Washington State University
David A. Makin, Washington State University
Susanna A. M. Rijkhoff, Washington State University
Returning Promise to Probation Work: Lessons of the Past
Julie L. Globokar, Kent State University
Rehabilitation/Supervision: An Evolving Relationship within California’s Parole System
Rita Shah, Elizabethtown College
The Long History of Mass Incarceration in the United States
Douglas Thomson, Chicago State University
SESSION 882: PARENTS IN CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Jamie Martin, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
"She Made Sure I was Gonna Take Care of My Kids": Negotiating Fatherhood during Incarceration
Damian J. Martinez, Arizona State University
John M. Eason, Arizona State University
Johnna Christian, Rutgers University
Natalie Rose Ortiz, Arizona State University
Imprisoned Mothers: Accounts of Mothering, before, during and after Incarceration
Dawn Beichner, Illinois State University
Cara E. Rabe-Hemp, Illinois State University
Mothers Behind Bars: Keeping Families Together
Jill M. D'Angelo, Buffalo State College
Thomas Needle, Buffalo State College
Tonya Hamm, Buffalo State College
Parenting Stress and the Adjustment to Incarceration among Jailed Fathers and Mothers
Jamie Martin, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Shannon Womer Phaneuf, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Garrett Andrew Rine, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
Derek Ryan Scheer, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 883: SCHOOL-BASED RESPONSES TO VICTIMIZATION AND OFFENDING
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Peter Lovegrove, University of Virginia
Assessing the Response to Legislation Mandating a School-Based Teen Dating Violence Policy in Texas
Robin D. Jackson, Sam Houston State University
Leana Bouffard, Sam Houston State University
Kate Fox, Arizona State University
Rhetoric versus Reality: Do School Administrators Care about the Victimization of Students?
Jonathan M. Kremser, Kutztown University of Pennsylvania
Bullying Prevention's Importance in Reducing School Offending and Suspensions
Peter Lovegrove, University of Virginia
Dewey Cornell, University of Virginia
364
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
SESSION 884: PSYCHOLOGICAL APPROACHES TO CRIME
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Joseph L. Nedelec, Florida State University
Battered Women of Interpersonal Violence: Psychological Issues
Jacqueline Rochelle Ross, Capella University
Jeanette Shutay, Calumet College of St. Joseph
Causal Linkages between Moral Neutralization and Aggressive Behaviour
Denis Ribeaud, Swiss Federal Institute of Technology
Cognitive Abilities during Infancy and Behavioral Problems during Childhood: A Genetically Informed Assessment
Joseph L. Nedelec, Florida State University
Kevin M. Beaver, Florida State University
SESSION 885: UNDERSTANDING NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL CRIME TRENDS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Meghan Rogers, Indiana University
Beyond the Great American Crime Decline: Taking an In-depth Look at U.S. Crime Trends
Kevin Tyler Wolff, Florida State University
Government's Crime Control Capability and National Homicide Rate
Don Soo Chon, Auburn University at Montgomery
Barr Younker, Auburn University at Montgomery
Theresa Pelfrey, Auburn University at Montgomery
The Effect of Prison Population Size on Crime Rates: Evidence from Cocaine and Marijuana Mandatory Minimum Sentencing
Geert Dhondt, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Does Age Matter in Cross-National Homicide Research?
Meghan Rogers, Indiana University
SESSION 886: PROPERTY CRIME AND SITUATIONAL PREVENTION
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Nikki Filipuzzi, Mount Royal University
Creating Safe Urban Design Excellence: A Review of Large Retail Store Environmental and Safety Design Policies
Nikki Filipuzzi, Mount Royal University
Tanya Trussler, Mount Royal University
Kelly Sundberg, Mount Royal University
Half Locked: Assessing the Distribution of Household Safety Protection in Stockholm
Bridget Lewakowski, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
Vania Ceccato, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
Situational Crime Prevention as a Strategy for Battling Clandestine Marijuana Farming
Filip Wiecko, Texas A&M University - Commerce
How Do They Defend Themselves? Retailers’ Perspectives about Shoplifting in Two Different Contexts
Óscar Ramos, University of Porto, Portugal
Carla Sofia Cardoso, University of Porto
SESSION 887: PUBLIC PERCEPTIONS OF GUILT AND WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Sarah Smith, University of California, Irvine
365
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Perceptions of Wrongfully Convicted Individuals: Do Factors Surrounding the Case Matter?
Meaghan E. Savage, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Kimberley A. Clow, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Regina A. Schuller, York University
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
Wrongful Conviction and Perceptions of the Canadian Criminal Justice System: Interviews with Community Members
Kimberley A. Clow, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Isabella Blandisi, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Rosemary Ricciardelli, York University
Regina A. Schuller, York University
Public Opinion about Decisions of Guilt: On the Ratio between False Positives and False Negatives
Jan W. de Keijser, Leiden University
Evianne de Lange, Leiden University
Johan van Wilsem, Leiden University
Prison Grievance Processes and Perceptions of Justice
Sarah Smith, University of California, Irvine
SESSION 888: EVALUATION OF STRATEGIES TO ADDRESS SEX OFFENDING
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Suman Kakar, Florida International University
Bad Touches, Getting Away, and Never Keeping Secrets: An Examination of the Efficacy of the "Red Flag Green Flag People"
Program
Mckenzie Wood, North Dakota State University
Carol A. Archbold, North Dakota State University
Evaluation of Sex Offender Registration and Community Notification Law in Korea: Balancing the Right of Individuals and Demands
for Public Awareness
Ji Hyon Kang, Korean Institute of Criminology
Ji Sun Kim, Korean Institute of Criminology
Evaluation of Therapeutic Change in Sex Offenders
Santiago Redondo, University of Barcelona
Marian Martinez Garcia, University of Barcelona
Policing Cybersex: The Internet Escorts
Francis M. Williams, Plymouth State University
SESSION 889: ROUTINE ACTIVITIES AND CYBER-CRIME DECISIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Aleksandra J. Snowden, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Cyberstalking Victimization: Assessing the Role of Routine Activity and Lifestyle
Byung Lee, Michigan State University
Thomas J. Holt, Michigan State University
Offender Decision-Making Factors in Critical Infrastructure Cyber Attacks
Aunshul Rege, Rutgers University
Quelling the Flames: Examining the Role of Substance Use as a Risk Factor for Experiencing or Perpetrating Cyberbullying within the
Routine Activities Theory Perspective
Jordana Nicole Navarro, University of Central Florida
Jana L. Jasinski, University of Central Florida
366
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
SESSION 890: ROUNDTABLE: QUESTIONING CONTEXT: CHALLENGES, STRATEGIES, AND
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FACULTY TEACHING AN INTRODUCTION TO CRIMINAL JUSTICE
COURSE
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Michael D. Bush, Northern Kentucky University
Discussant:
Nicole Hendrix, Radford University
SESSION 891: ROUNDTABLE: WHAT DOES THIS HAVE TO DO WITH BEING A POLICE
OFFICER? CONVINCING STUDENTS THAT SOCIAL SCIENCE AND CRIMINOLOGY ARE
RELEVANT TO “THE JOB”
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Daniel Price, Westfield State University
Discussants:
Tom Roscoe, Westfield State University
Byung Jun Cho, Westfield State University
Christopher Kudlac, Westfield State University
John Jones, Westfield State University
Vic Ascolillo, Westfield State University
SESSION 892: ROUNDTABLE: WHAT ROLE CAN NONPROFIT ORGANISATIONS PLAY IN
PRISONER REENTRY? EXPLORING INTERNATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Prison and Reentry Volunteers: An Overlooked, Creative, and Cost-Effective Source of Human Capital for Desistance
Sarah Lazzari, Portland State University
Tom P. O'Connor, Transforming Corrections
Third-Sector Intervention and Offender Supervision in Times of Economic Crisis: The Case of France
Martine Elisabeth Herzog-Evans, University of Rheims
Volunteers as Agents of Change
Caleb Lloyd, Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada
Nonprofits and Prisoner Reentry in the U.S. and U.K.: Preliminary Observations
Rosie Meek, Teesside University, UK
Beverly D. Frazier, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Discussant:
Shadd Maruna, Queen's University Belfast
SESSION 893: ROUNDTABLE: WHY ARE NIGERIAN NURSES VULNERABLE TO DEADLY
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE?
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Chair:
Anita Kalunta-Crumpton, Texas Southern University
Discussants:
Emmanuel Onyeozili, University of Maryland, Eastern Shore
Charles Ochie, Albany State University
Patrick Ibe, Albany State University
Charles Ubah, Georgia College & State University
Evaristus Obinyan, Clark Atlanta University
James Opolot, Texas Southern University
367
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
SESSION 894: ROUNDTABLE: WRONGFUL CONVICTIONS: POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Allison M. Cotton, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Discussants:
Denise Mowder, Metropolitan State College of Denver
Randall Grometstein, Fitchburg State University
SESSION 895: THE EFFECTS OF CONTEXTUAL AND ORGANIZATIONAL FACTORS ON
PRISONER REENTRY
Saturday, November 17 - 8:30 am to 9:50 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Jennifer Cobbina, Michigan State University
Reentry from Incarceration during Young Adulthood: The Impact of Family Context on Youth in Transition
Elizabeth Panuccio, Rutgers University
“Where you live and how you live Matters”: How Neighborhood Context Influences Recidivism and Desistance among Female
Offenders
Jennifer Cobbina, Michigan State University
William Oliver, Indiana University
Mark Berg, Indiana University
Examining the Role of Organizational Factors in Reentry Success
Jennifer Lerch, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
Examining the Role of County Context in Predicting Recidivism among Federal Prisoners
Michael S. Caudy, George Mason University
Jennifer Lerch, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 896: TESTING FORENSIC EVIDENCE IN SEXUAL ASSAULT CRIMES: RESEARCH IN
HOUSTON TO IMPROVE OUTCOMES FOR VICTIMS AND THE JUSTICE SYSTEM
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Burnham 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
William Wells, Sam Houston State University
Sexual Assault Kit Action Research: Lessons Learned and Outcomes
Irma Rios, Houston Police Department Crime Lab
Sex Crimes Investigators’ Use of DNA Evidence: Results from Interviews with Houston Police Department Investigators
Tasha A. Menaker, Sam Houston State University
Bradley A. Campbell, Sam Houston State University
William Wells, Sam Houston State University
What Happens When Unsubmitted Sexual Assault Kits Get Tested? The Investigative Outcomes in Cold Cases After Forensic
Evidence Testing
Seth W. Fallik, Sam Houston State University
William Wells, Sam Houston State University
Forging New Ground for Victim Notification Processes: Risks and Rewards
Noel Busch-Armendariz, University of Texas at Austin
Sapana Donde, University of Texas at Austin
Sonia Corrales, Houston Area Women's Center
368
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Laura Zavala, Houston Area Women's Center
Belinda G. Null, Houston Police Department
Mary Lentschke, Houston Police Department
Discussant:
William Wells, Sam Houston State University
SESSION 897: PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT: DEVELOPING THE NEXT GENERATION OF
SCHOLARS - NIJ'S AND NSF'S GRADUATE RESEARCH FELLOWSHIP PROGRAMS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Chicago Room, 5th Floor
Discussants:
Marie Garcia, National Institute of Justice
Nadine Frederique, National Institute of Justice
Marjorie S. Zatz, National Science Foundation
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 898: MAFIA INVESTMENTS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Clark 10, 7th Floor
Chair:
Ernesto Savona, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Analyzing the Evolution of Mafia Investments
Stefano Caneppele, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Francesco Calderoni, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Mafia Neighborhoods: Patterns of Real Estate Investments in Large Italian Cities
Francesco Calderoni, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Marco Dugato, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Mafia Companies: Profitable Investments or Shells for Money Laundering?
Michele Riccardi, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Stefano Caneppele, Università Cattolica Milan - Transcrime
Discussants:
Andrew Papachristos, Yale University
Jan Van Dijk, Tilburg University, The Netherlands
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 899: TRAFFICKING IN ART AND ANTIQUITIES
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Clark 9, 7th Floor
Chair:
Blythe Bowman Proulx, Virginia Commonwealth University
Manufactured, Manipulated and Modified? Evidence and the Antiquities Market
Morag M. Kersel, DePaul University
Neutralization Theory and Property Crime: The Application of Justification Rhetoric to Art Crime
Kate Melody Burmon, Northeastern University
Looted Antiquities at the Getty Museum in Criminological Perspective
Blythe Bowman Proulx, Virginia Commonwealth University
Neil Brodie, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
Global Criminal Markets and Global Criminal Policy Knots: Trafficking Antiquities in Socio-Political Context
Simon Mackenzie, University of Glasgow / Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research
369
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 900: PATTERNS OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN IN ALASKA: ESTIMATES,
CORRELATES, AND BATTERER INTERVENTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Dearborn 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Estimates of Violence Against Women from the Alaska Victimization Survey
Katherine H. TePas, Office of the Governor, State of Alaska
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Brad A. Myrstol, University of Alaska Anchorage
Health Correlates of Violence Against Women: Results from the Alaska Victimization Survey
Marny S. Rivera, University of Alaska Anchorage
Gabriel M. Garcia, University of Alaska Anchorage
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Katherine H. TePas, Office of the Governor, State of Alaska
Rural and Urban Differences in Intimate Partner Violence: Estimates from the Alaska Victimization Survey
Darryl Wood, Washington State University - Vancouver
Brad A. Myrstol, University of Alaska Anchorage
Andre Rosay, University of Alaska Anchorage
Katherine H. TePas, Office of the Governor, State of Alaska
Evaluation of Fairbanks Domestic Violence Misdemeanor Pilot Project: Preliminary Results and Their Policy Implications
Cory R. Lepage, University of Alaska Anchorage
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 901: THE POLITICS OF PUNISHMENT AND CORRECTION
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Dearborn 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
William J. Farrell, Indiana University Southeast
Disadvantaged Women and the Politics of Scapegoating
Bernadette Olson, Indiana University Southeast
Privatization, Politics and the Budget: Lessons from Recent History
William J. Farrell, Indiana University Southeast
Welcome Home Vets: The Number of Veterans Entering Jail is Increasing
William Brown, Western Oregon University
Is Wall Street a Gang?
Randall G. Shelden, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Jeremy Waller, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Natalie Martinez, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Kristine-Gem D. Estrella, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Kelly Stout, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 902: EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY: AN EXPERIMENTAL EVALUATION OF
SUPERVISION STRATEGIES FOR HIGH RISK PROBATIONERS IN PHILADELPHIA
(ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION OF EXPERIMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY)
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
LaSalle 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Geoffrey Barnes, University of Pennsylvania
370
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
The Effect of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy on the Recidivism of High Risk Offenders
Ellen Kurtz, Philadelphia Adult Probation and Parole Department
Geoffrey Barnes, University of Pennsylvania
Estimating the Actual Treatment Effects of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
Jordan Hyatt, University of Pennsylvania
Geoffrey Barnes, University of Pennsylvania
Implementing an Experimental Intervention in the Community Corrections Environment
Amanda Tudor, Philadelphia Adult Probation and Parole Department
Jordan Hyatt, University of Pennsylvania
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 903: YOUTH (IN)JUSTICE: REPORTS FROM THE FRONT
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
LaSalle 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Elliott Currie, University of California, Irvine
The Therapeutic Bubble: How Ineffective Interventions Persist
Ken Cruz, University of California, Irvine
Survival and Self-Destruction in the Midst of Control and Abandonment: "Punitive Actions" and "Welfare Inactions" as Catalysts for
Self-Reliance and Silent Suffering
Randy Myers, Old Dominion University
"We're Not Supposed to Have Nothing in Here": Incarcerated Girls Expose How Juvenile Justice Institutions Contradict Their
Rehabilitative Rhetoric
Anastasia Tosouni, Clayton State University
Discussant:
Sonya Goshe, University of California, Irvine
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 904: THE FUTURE OF SELF-CONTROL
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Logan Room, 3rd Floor
Costs and Salience: Comparing and Contrasting Alternative Operationalizations
Wyatt Brown, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
The Relationship between Different Operationalizations of Costs and Salience on Antisocial Outcomes
Caridad Jimenez, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
Self-Control and Impulsivity: Is It Time to Move Forward by Looking Back?
Veronica Winters, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
Locating Self-Control in the HEXACO Model of Personality
Melissa Lugo, University of South Florida
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
Discussant:
Shayne Jones, University of South Florida
371
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 905: STRATEGIC COUNTERMEASURES FOR ANTI-COUNTERFEITING,
INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS, AND PRODUCT FRAUD: ENABLING THE SHIFT TO
PREVENTION
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Marshfield Room, 3rd Floor
Chairs:
John Williams Spink, Michigan State University
Justin Heinonen, Michigan State University
Reviewing Our Knowledge of the Product Counterfeiting Event: A Systematic, Theory-Based Assessment
Justin Heinonen, Michigan State University
Roy Fenoff, Michigan State University
Comparative Assessment of Public Policy Decision-Making with Uncertain Statistics: Supporting Anti-Counterfeiting, Intellectual
Property Rights, and Product Fraud Initiatives
John Williams Spink, Michigan State University
Zoltán Levente Fejes, Michigan State University
Counterfeits by Another Name: Exploring Consumers’ Understanding of Unauthorized Replica Products
Roy Fenoff, Michigan State University
John Williams Spink, Michigan State University
Cue Utilization in the Product Authentication Process
Zoltán Levente Fejes, Michigan State University
Jeremy M. Wilson, Michigan State University
THEMATIC SESSION
SESSION 906: TRANSFORMATIONS IN PUNISHMENT AND SOCIETY
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Wilson Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine
Prisons beyond the New Penology
Alison Liebling, Cambridge University
From Mass Incarceration to Mass Supervision: Reexamining Punishment and Society
Fergus McNeill, University of Glasgow
Punishment and the New Human Right of Hope
Dirk Van Zyl Smit, Nottingham University
Critical Knowledge and Penal Practices: Pretrial Risk Assessment and Early Intervention in Specialized Domestic Violence Courts
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto
Paula Maurutto, University of Toronto
AUTHOR MEETS CRITICS
SESSION 907: THE BLACK CHILD-SAVERS: RACIAL DEMOCRACY AND JUVENILE JUSTICE
(ORGANIZED BY THE DIVISION ON PEOPLE OF COLOR AND CRIME)
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Water Tower Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Aaron Kupchik, University of Delaware
Author
Geoff Ward, University of California, Irvine
372
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Critics
Helen Taylor Greene, Texas Southern University
Vernetta Young, Howard University
Justin T. Pickett, University at Albany, SUNY
SESSION 908: THE LINK BETWEEN VICTIMIZATION AND OFFENDING
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Buckingham Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Heather Zaykowski, University of Massachusetts Boston
The Cycle of Crime: Examining the Processes Linking Offending and Victimization
Jackson Bunch, University of Georgia
Jody Clay-Warner, University of Georgia
Ronald Simons, University of Georgia
The Victim-Offender Overlap in Intimate Partner Violence: The Role of Individual-Level and Risky Lifestyle Factors
Leah Daigle, Georgia State University
Lisa R. Muftić, Georgia State University
Victimization and Offending Trajectories: Insights from the Offending, Crime, and Justice Survey
Heather Zaykowski, University of Massachusetts Boston
Whitney D. Gunter, Western Michigan University
SESSION 909: POLICING GANGS: PROSPECTS AND PROBLEMS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Burnham 1, 7th Floor
Chair:
Matthew Hickman, Seattle University
Adoption of the Gang Task Force Approach to Combating Criminal Gang Activity
Julie Barrows, University of Minnesota
Michael Vuolo, Purdue University
Cooperation between Police and Social Authorities in Sweden to Combat Youth Gangs
Anders Valdemar Kassman, Ersta Skondal University, Sweden
Lars Oscarsson, Ersta Skondal University, Sweden
Filip Wollter, Ersta Skondal University, Sweden
"My Gang’s Bigger than Your Gang": Understanding Policing, Gangs and Community
Annette Robertson, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
Lesley McMillan, Glasgow Caledonian University, Scotland
The Policing of Black Males in Toronto, Canada
Akwasi Owusu-Bempah, University of Toronto
Scot Wortley, University of Toronto
SESSION 910: PRETRIAL DECISIONS IN STATE, FEDERAL AND NON-U.S. COURTS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Burnham 4, 7th Floor
Chair:
George Mair, Liverpool John Moores University
Pretrial Release in the Federal Courts: What do the Data Tell Us?
Thomas H. Cohen, Bureau of Justice Statistics
The Effects of Age, Gender and Race/Ethnicity on Pretrial Decisions for Domestic Violence Offenders
Danielle Romain, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
Tina L. Freiburger, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee
373
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
The Influence of Social Offender Characteristics on Pretrial Release and Sentence Length
Hilde Wermink, Leiden University
Brian Johnson, University of Maryland
Jan W. de Keijser, Leiden University
Paul Nieuwbeerta, Leiden University
Anja Dirkzwager, NSCR
Using Research to Improve Pretrial Policy: Lessons Learned from a Ten-County Colorado Project
Michael Ryan Jones, Pretrial Justice Institute
SESSION 911: WHAT WORKS IN COMMUNITY CORRECTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Clark 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Christine Scott-Hayward, Columbia Law School
But Does It Work? An Examination of the Effectiveness of a Midwestern CBT Program
Andrew Verheek, Western Michigan University
Working through Work Release: A Study of Characteristics Associated with Successful Completion of Jail-Based Work Release
Programming
Joseph Rukus, University of Florida
Jodi Lane, University of Florida
Assessing the Use of Points and Rewards across Five Federal Districts: A Contingency Management Approach
Lincoln Sloas, George Mason University
Amy Murphy, George Mason University
Faye S. Taxman, George Mason University
The Effectiveness of Graduated Levels of Control through Graduated Community Supervision Sanctioning on Reoffending
Catie Lynn Clark, Florida State University
Kaleena J. Burkes, Florida State University
Bill Bales, Florida State University
SESSION 912: THE EFFICACY OF JUVENILE JUSTICE INTERVENTIONS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Clark 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Juvenile Arrests: Do They Deter or Increase Reoffending?
Akiva M. Liberman, The Urban Institute
KiDeuk Kim, Urban Institute
David S. Kirk, University of Texas
Impact of Brief Intervention Services on Truant Youth Arrests over Time
Richard Dembo, University of South Florida
Rhissa Briones-Robinson, University of South Florida
Jennifer Wareham, Wayne State University
James Schmeidler, Mt. Sinai Medical School
Ken C. Winters, University of Minnesota
Kimberly L. Barrett, University of South Florida
Rocio Ungaro, University of South Florida
Lora Karas, University of South Florida
Steven Belenko, Temple University
Laura Gulledge, University of Southern Mississippi
Evaluating the Effectiveness of a Victim Impact Intervention through Examination of Dynamic Risk Score Changes
Michael Baglivio, Florida Department of Juvenile Justice
Jennifer Rechichi, Florida Department of Juvenile Justice
374
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Juvenile Day Reporting, Interventions, and Theoretical Implications
Ellen Patricia McCann, Rutgers University
Preliminary Findings from the OJJDP-Funded Outcome and Process Evaluation of Juvenile Drug Courts
Carrie Sullivan, University of Cincinnati
Lesli Blair, University of Cincinnati
Edward Latessa, University of Cincinnati
Paula Smith, University of Cincinnati
SESSION 913: ISSUES RELATED TO VISITATION AND CONTACT WITH FAMILY IN
CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Clark 7, 7th Floor
Chair:
Stephen E. Tillotson, Indiana University
Doing Gender in Prison: Visitation as a Respite from Hyper-Masculinity
Randy Blazak, Portland State University
Effects of a Prison Nursery Program on Recidivism
Lorie S. Goshin, Hunter College, CUNY
Mary W. Byrne, Columbia University
Alana M. Henninger, CUNY Graduate Center / John Jay College of Criminal Justice
Examining the Impact of Adult Social Bonds on Inmates' Visitation and Recidivism
Cassandra Atkin, Sam Houston State University
Gaylene Armstrong, Sam Houston State University
The Jail in the Community: Incarceration, Visitation, and Daily Life
Stephen E. Tillotson, Indiana University
SESSION 914: ENVIRONMENTAL CRIMINOLOGY
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Cresthill Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Linda M. Robyn, Northern Arizona University
Bad Apples in the Food Industry
Tim Bauer, Western Michigan University
Environmental Damage and Crime: Past, Present, and Future
Noriyoshi Takemura, Toin Universitiy of Yokohama, Japan
Spatial Fluctuations in Crime by Season and the Green Crime Paradigm
Samantha Felice, California State University, Stanislaus
A Mental Model Approach to Understanding Poaching Behavior
Tamara Dempsey, Michigan State University
Uranium Mining: Why 'Never Happens Again' Always Happens Again
Linda M. Robyn, Northern Arizona University
SESSION 915: PSYCHOLOGICAL CRIMINOLOGY
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Indiana Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
MaryAnn Thrush, University of Florida
Fast Thinking, Slow Thinking, and Crime
Jerome McKean, Ball State University
Personality and Crime: An Examination of the Influence of the Five Factor Model on Offending
Kenethia L. McIntosh Fuller, North Carolina Central University
375
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
What Are We Teaching Our Students in Introductory Criminology Textbooks? Ignorance, Misattributions, and Errors about the
Psychological Theory of Alfred Adler
Phillip Shon, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Shannon Barton Bellessa, Indiana State University
J.H. Lee, Indiana State University
Understanding Anger’s Role in Crime and Rehabilitation: A Conceptual Overview of Current Research
MaryAnn Thrush, University of Florida
SESSION 916: UNDERSTANDING SUBCULTURE
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Kimball Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Adam Monroe Stearn, Northeastern University
Fear of Crime and Violent Values
Susan McNeeley, University of Cincinnati
Mitigating Crime in a Slum Community: Understanding the Role of Social Structures, Social Processes and Community Culture in a
Neighborhood Intervention Program
Raymund E. Narag, Southern Illinois University
Testing the “Culture in Action” Paradigm in Washington State
Melanie-Angela Neuilly, Washington State University
Zachary Hamilton, Washington State University
Brian Wolf, University of Idaho
Zachary Hays, Washington State University
Subcultural Theory and Publicity: How an Online Culture of Adolescence Relates to Delinquency
Adam Monroe Stearn, Northeastern University
SESSION 917: EMERGING ISSUES IN CRIME POLICY: UNIONIZATION, COLLABORATION, AND
TECHNOLOGY
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
LaSalle 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Laura Hanson, University of Kent, UK
The Role of Collaborative Governance and Technology Operational Evaluations in Lean Economic Times
Nancy Merritt, U.S. Department of Justice
Joseph Heaps, U.S. Department of Justice
Jeremy G. Carter, University of North Florida
Eric Grommon, Indiana University-Purdue University, Indianapolis
The Passaic River Corridor Project: A Multi-Jurisdictional Effort to Share Information
Michael Walker, Passaic County Community College
Marilyn Marks Rubin, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
William Fraher, Paterson Police Department
James J. Sheehan, Northern NJ - Newark/Jersey City Urban Areas Security Initiative
Measuring the Effect of Public Sector Unionization on Criminal Justice Public Policy
Derek Cohen, University of Cincinnati
Jay Kennedy, University of Cincinnati
Towards Developing a Critical Cartographic Criminology: An Integrated Approach to Crime Mapping
Laura Hanson, University of Kent, UK
SESSION 918: PERCEPTIONS OF PUNITIVENESS
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
LaSalle 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
Karl-Heinz Reuband, University of Düsseldorf, Germany
376
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Pragmatic Punitiveness? The Dimensions of American Public Opinion about Criminal Justice
Kevin H. Wozniak, American University
Devon Johnson, George Mason University
Edward Maguire, American University
The Politics of Anti-Cruelty Legislation in Canada: An Analysis of Parliamentary Debates on Amending the Criminal Code
Antonio Robert Verbora, University of Windsor
Measuring Public Dissatisfaction with Sentencing Practices
Chloé Leclerc, Université de Montréal
Fear and Punitiveness: How Do Concerns about Crime Affect Attitudes about the Purposes of Punishment?
Stacy Hoskins Haynes, Mississippi State University
Laine Briddell, University of Richmond
Punitive Attitudes in the German Population: The Role of Instrumental and Expressive Orientations
Karl-Heinz Reuband, University of Düsseldorf, Germany
SESSION 919: WOMEN AND VIOLENCE: EXPLORING CONTEXT AND TYPOLOGIES
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Madison Room, 3rd Floor
Chair:
Sarah Browning, North Dakota State University
Explanations of Female-Perpetrated Homicide
Elizabeth Gurian, Norwich University
The Female Family Annihilator: Restructuring Traditional Typologies
Katie Fleming, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Hannah Scott, University of Ontario Institute of Technology
Gender and Contextual Factors: An Analysis of Lethal vs. Non-lethal Outcomes during Violent Criminal Incidents
Margaret M. Chrusciel, University of South Carolina
Barbara A. Koons-Witt, University of South Carolina
The Socio-Political Context of Women’s Violent Crime
Judith S. Willison, Bridgewater State University
SESSION 920: MEASURING GENDER AND CRIME
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Millennium Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
Jeff W. Cohen, University of Washington - Tacoma
Drunken Sex or Assault? An Empirical Investigation of College Students’ Understanding of Consent and Intoxication
Alexis Joy Ibarra, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Nicholas James Chagnon, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Social Development and Female Crime Trends: Taiwan as an Example
Hua Zhong, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Huanhua Zhang, Chinese University of Hong Kong
Darrell Steffensmeier, Pennsylvania State University
Gender Differences in Predictors of Crime: Exploring the Role of Victimization
Aaron Puhrmann, University of Miami
Construct Validity and Emerging Meta-Frameworks for Understanding the Gender-Crime Relationship
Jeff W. Cohen, University of Washington - Tacoma
Randy Martin, Indiana University of Pennsylvania
SESSION 921: CRIME PATTERNS AND ROUTINE VARIATION
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Price Room, 5th Floor
Chair:
Deanna L. Wilkinson, Ohio State University
377
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Homicide Trends in Germany, 1970 to 2010
Raymond Teske, Sam Houston State University
Hans-Joerg Albrecht, Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law
The Context of Crime in Lisbon, Portugal
Ana Veronica Neves, ISCTE - IUL Portugal
Changes in Social Interaction Patterns and Their Role in Violence Trends
Maria Tcherni, University of New Haven
SESSION 922: ROUNDTABLE: UNITED NATIONS PANEL: CRIMINOLOGY AT THE UN
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 2, 7th Floor
Chair:
Aaron Fichtelberg, University of Delaware
Discussants:
Rosemary Barberet, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Kristiina Kangaspunta, UNICRI
Jay Albanese, Virginia Commonwealth University
SESSION 923: ROUNDTABLE: MEASURING HUMAN TRAFFICKING: EXAMPLES IN
OPERATIONALIZATION AND INSTRUMENTATION
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 3, 7th Floor
Chair:
John Picarelli, National Institute of Justice
Discussants:
Pam Lattimore, RTI International
Meredith Dank, The Urban Institute
Michael Shively, Abt Associates Inc.
Kelle Barrick, RTI International
Colleen Owens, The Urban Institute
Sheldon X. Zhang, San Diego State University
SESSION 924: ROUNDTABLE: TEACHING CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY: TEACHING SPECIFIC
CONTENT AREAS CRITICALLY
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 4, 7th Floor
Teaching Elite Crime Critically
William Calathes, New Jersey City University
Teaching Occupy
Avi Brisman, Eastern Kentucky University
Teaching Policing Critically: Beyond the Cop Shop
Vikas Kumar Gumbhir, Gonzaga University
Teaching Juvenile Delinquency Critically
Carla J. Barrett, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
SESSION 925: ROUNDTABLE: TEACHING SENSITIVE TOPICS: INTIMATE PARTNER ABUSE,
RAPE, AND VICTIM BLAMING
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 5, 7th Floor
Chair:
Kate Luther, Pacific Lutheran University
Discussants:
Ellen G. Cohn, Florida International University
Allison Foley, Augusta State University
378
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Kelly Knight, Sam Houston State University
Rae Taylor, Loyola University New Orleans
Devon Thacker Thomas, University of Colorado - Boulder
Katherine Vecitis, Tufts University
SESSION 926: ROUNDTABLE: THE EMERGENCE OF SMART POLICING
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 6, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Julie Schnobrich-Davis, Central Connecticut State University
Zachary Hays, Washington State University
Kevin M. Bryant, Benedictine College
Charles M. Katz, Arizona State University
John Worrall, University of Texas at Dallas
Adam M. Bossler, Georgia Southern University
Lynn Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
S. George Vincentnathan, University of Texas - Pan American
Christopher M. Sedelmaier, University of New Haven
SESSION 927: ROUNDTABLE: THE GAINS AND CHALLENGES OF PENAL ABOLITION: A
ROUNDTABLE DISCUSSION
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 7, 7th Floor
ICOPA: Making International Connections to Contest State Repression
Justin Piche, University of Ottawa
Working against Carceral Expansion
Judah Nathan Schept, Eastern Kentucky University
Abolition, Reform, Utopia and the Unfinished
Liat Ben-Moshe, University of Illinois at Chicago
Feminist and LGBTQ Perspectives on Prison Abolition in Chicago
Beth E. Richie, University of Illinois at Chicago
Trouble with the Child in the Carceral State
Erica R. Meiners, Northeastern Illinois University
The Paradox of Queer Programming in Jail
Ray Noll, University of Chicago
Hip Hop’s Abolition of School-Prison Industrial Complex
Anthony J. Nocella, II, Hamline University
Kim Socha, Normandale Community College
SESSION 928: ROUNDTABLE: THE NEED FOR CREATING THERAPEUTIC COMMUNITIES
WITHIN SOUTH AFRICAN CORRECTIONAL FACILITIES
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Sandburg 8, 7th Floor
Discussants:
Michelle Ovens, University of South Africa
Kenneth Osborne, Sheridan Correctional Centre, Illinois
Catherine Burton, The Citadel
SESSION 929: THE GENDERING OF OFFENDING
Saturday, November 17 - 10:00 am to 11:20 am
Spire Parlor, 6th Floor
Chair:
M.J. Gathings, North Carolina State University
379
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17
Describing Gender Differences in Violent Offending
CheyOnna Sewell, University of Missouri - St. Louis
Amart Zaatut, Rutgers University
Kristin Carbone-Lopez, University of Missouri - St. Louis
The Effects of APD and Psychopathy on Gender Differences in Violent and Nonviolent Offending
Deborah Baskin, Loyola University Chicago
Arielle Baskin-Sommers, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Joseph Newman, University of Wisconsin - Madison
Ira Sommers, Loyola University Chicago / NORC at the University of Chicago
What They Say or What They Do? Gender Differences in Peer-Pressure, Friends’ Delinquency, and Violence
Ryan Spohn, University of Nebraska at Omaha
Gender Differences in Criminal Pathways: The Impact of Social Context
Ana Vigna, Universidad de la República, Uruguay
BRUNCH
SESSION 930: ASC CLOSING BRUNCH
Saturday, November 17 - 11:30 am to 1:00 pm
Empire Room, Lobby Level
MEETING
SESSION 931: ASC EXECUTIVE BOARD MEETING
Saturday, November 17 - 12:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Crystal Room, 3rd Floor
380
A SPECIAL THANK YOU
The American Society of Criminology wishes to extend a special thanks to the many
publishers and government agencies that have once again chosen to exhibit their materials and
sponsor numerous food events.
We greatly value your participation and note that your presence has become an integral
aspect of our annual meeting experience. We thank you again, not just for your business, but
your support of the field of criminology.
381
PARTICIPANT INDEX
*Please note: Numbers in index refer to the session numbers
A
Abayomi, Kobi A. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 305
Abbott, Robert .................................................................................................................................................................................. 720
Abboud, Mia J. ................................................................................................................................................................................. 729
Abdel-Salam, Sami ........................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Abdu, Eman ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 414
Abdul-Adil, Jaleel............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Abell, Leslie...................................................................................................................................................................................... 282
Abram, Karen M. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 391
Abramson, Marc F. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 663
Acton, Ryan ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 441
Adamczyk, Amy ................................................................................................................................................................................ 240
Adams, Charles ................................................................................................................................................................................ 361
Adams, Douglas ............................................................................................................................................................................... 874
Adams, Ericka Briana ...................................................................................................................................................................... 601
Adams, Harry ................................................................................................................................................................................... 362
Adams, Ken ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 683
Adams, Michael O. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 656
Adams, Peggy ................................................................................................................................................................................... 408
Adams, Wallis E. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 019
Adams, Ward A. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 439
Aday, Ronald .................................................................................................................................................................................... 746
Addington, Lynn A............................................................................................................................................................ 123, 522, 722
Aden, Hassan ................................................................................................................................................................................... 267
Adler, Freda ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 798
Adomako, Maame............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Adubato, Beth ................................................................................................................................................................................... 233
Aeby, Samantha................................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Afonso, Kristie Lynn ......................................................................................................................................................................... 823
Agha, Suzanne .................................................................................................................................................................................. 009
Agnew, Robert .......................................................................................................................................................... 095, 192, 337, 772
Agnich, Laura E. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 080
Agozino, Biko ................................................................................................................................................................................... 715
Aguilar Conde, Araceli .................................................................................................................................................................... 020
Aguirre, Benigno .............................................................................................................................................................................. 754
Agustina, Jose R. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 439
Ahlin, Eileen ............................................................................................................................................................................. 588, 657
Ahonen, Lia .............................................................................................................................................................................. 454, 596
Ainsworth, Stephanie A. ................................................................................................................................................................... 666
Akers, Caroline Gibson .................................................................................................................................................................... 505
Akers, Ronald ................................................................................................................................................................................... 557
Akins, Scott ............................................................................................................................................................................... 474, 736
Akoensi, Thomas David............................................................................................................................................................ 213, 872
Akuchie, Desiree .............................................................................................................................................................................. 365
Al-Zoubi, Amira ............................................................................................................................................................................... 082
Alaniz, Heather ................................................................................................................................................................................ 107
Alasti, Sanaz ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 821
Alatorre, Francisco J. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 475
Albanese, Jay ....................................................................................................................................................118, 167, 655, 809, 922
Albini, Joseph ................................................................................................................................................................................... 655
Albonetti, Celesta ............................................................................................................................................................................. 242
402
Albrecht, Hans-Joerg ....................................................................................................................................................................... 921
Albrecht, James F. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 593
Alderden, Megan ...................................................................................................................................................................... 639, 706
Aldridge, Judith................................................................................................................................................................................ 731
Alexander, Dean C. .......................................................................................................................................................... 196, 417, 731
Alexander, Ryan ............................................................................................................................................................................... 186
Alfaro, Karla .................................................................................................................................................................................... 017
Aliiaskarov, Bekchoro ...................................................................................................................................................................... 788
Allahverdiyeva, Aysel ....................................................................................................................................................................... 246
Allard, Troy ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 317
Allen, Andrea ................................................................................................................................................................................... 039
Allen, Ashley Lynn............................................................................................................................................................................ 069
Allen, Jonathan G. ........................................................................................................................................................... 439, 572, 718
Allred, Sarah .................................................................................................................................................................................... 708
Almeida, Pedro R. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 552
Almquist, Zack.................................................................................................................................................................................. 441
Alomosh, Ahmad Falah .................................................................................................................................................................... 606
Alper, Mariel ............................................................................................................................................................................ 170, 388
Alpert, Geoffrey P. ................................................................................................................................................................... 292, 471
Alsabahi, Laila ................................................................................................................................................................................. 164
Altheimer, Irshad ............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Altier, Mary Beth ............................................................................................................................................................................. 532
Alvarez, Alex ............................................................................................................................................................................ 247, 684
Alvarez-Rivera, Lorna L. ................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Alvi, Shahid ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 029
Amel, Angela .................................................................................................................................................................................... 263
Ames, Cherie .................................................................................................................................................................................... 235
Amidon, Ethan.......................................................................................................................................................................... 554, 572
Amirault, Joanna.............................................................................................................................................................................. 113
Amster, Randall................................................................................................................................................................................ 224
Anamali, Morena ............................................................................................................................................................................. 149
Anastasia, Desiré J. M. .................................................................................................................................................................... 288
Anderson, Amy L. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 086, 146
Anderson, Briana Michelle .............................................................................................................................................................. 572
Anderson, Gabriel ............................................................................................................................................................................ 552
Anderson, Lily .................................................................................................................................................................................. 658
Anderson, Matthew .......................................................................................................................................................................... 562
Anderson, Stephanie Hawkins .......................................................................................................................................................... 714
Anderson, Thomas K. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Anderson, Valerie Rose .................................................................................................................................................................... 207
Anderson, Will .................................................................................................................................................................................. 614
Andersson, Catrin ............................................................................................................................................................................ 650
Andiloro, Nancy ............................................................................................................................................................................... 008
Andreopoulos, Chris ........................................................................................................................................................................ 037
Andresen, Carsten ............................................................................................................................................................................ 354
Andresen, Martin ............................................................................................................................................................................. 197
Angelo, Dean.................................................................................................................................................................................... 450
Angleman, Amy ................................................................................................................................................................................ 617
Aniskiewicz, Rick .............................................................................................................................................................................. 694
Ansari, Sami ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 414
Anselin, Luc E. ................................................................................................................................................................................. 545
Antisin, Arianna ............................................................................................................................................................................... 474
Antle, Kelsey .................................................................................................................................................................... 154, 185, 761
Antonaccio, Olena.............................................................................................................................................234, 531, 646, 699, 787
Antrobus, Emma ....................................................................................................................................................................... 235, 529
Apel, Robert ............................................................................................................................................................................. 066, 395
Appiahene-Gyamfi, Joseph .............................................................................................................................................................. 599
Applegate, Brandon K. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 460
403
Applin, Samantha E.......................................................................................................................................................................... 179
Arauz-Cuadra, Cesar ....................................................................................................................................................................... 620
Archbold, Carol A. ........................................................................................................................................................... 525, 605, 888
Arford, Tammi .................................................................................................................................................................................. 016
Arfsten, Kerrin-Sina ......................................................................................................................................................................... 503
Ariel, Barak .......................................................................................................................................................145, 409, 432, 740, 819
Arizola, Ricardo ............................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Arkow, Phil ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 350
Armborst, Andreas ........................................................................................................................................................................... 153
Armstrong, Gaylene ................................................................................................................................................................. 547, 913
Armstrong, Todd .............................................................................................................................................................................. 021
Arneson, Michelle ............................................................................................................................................................................ 217
Arnull, Elaine ................................................................................................................................................................................... 025
Arria, Amelia M. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 823
Arrigo, Bruce A. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 202
Arslan, Hasan T. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 421
Artello, Kristine ................................................................................................................................................................................ 596
Arter, Michael L. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 422
Arthur, Michael ................................................................................................................................................................................ 720
Arunachalam, Dharmalingam.......................................................................................................................................................... 826
Arungwa, Samuel Chibuike ...................................................................................................................................................... 291, 326
Arvanites, Thomas M. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 549
Arvanitidis, Tania ............................................................................................................................................................................ 059
Asal, Victor ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 827
Ascione, Frank ................................................................................................................................................................................. 350
Ascolillo, Vic .................................................................................................................................................................................... 891
Aseltine, Elyshia ............................................................................................................................................................................... 076
Asencio, Emily K. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 190
Asscher, Jessica ............................................................................................................................................................................... 767
Atherton, Matthew ............................................................................................................................................................................ 236
Athey, Nicholas ................................................................................................................................................................................ 520
Atkin, Cassandra .............................................................................................................................................................................. 913
Atterberry, Keith .............................................................................................................................................................................. 283
Auerhahn, Kathleen ......................................................................................................................................................................... 404
Augimeri, Leena ............................................................................................................................................................................... 869
Augustyn, Megan Bears ................................................................................................................................................... 409, 461, 535
Austin, Jim................................................................................................................................................................................ 009, 665
Austin, Timothy ................................................................................................................................................................................ 610
Avakame, Edem F. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 061
Averdijk, Margit ............................................................................................................................................................................... 548
Avetisyan, Meri ................................................................................................................................................................................ 372
Aviv, Gali ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 686
Azam, Abul Yasir .............................................................................................................................................................................. 546
Azimi, Andia ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 179
B
Baals, Douglas Andrew............................................................................................................................................................ 075, 611
Bachar, Karen JoAnne ..................................................................................................................................................................... 527
Bachman, Ronet ....................................................................................................................................................................... 128, 625
Bachmann, Brittany ......................................................................................................................................................................... 829
Bachmann, Michael ......................................................................................................................................................................... 829
Backlin, Emy .................................................................................................................................................................................... 294
Bacon, Grant .................................................................................................................................................................................... 129
Baek, Hyunin .................................................................................................................................................................................... 564
Baenziger, Matthias ......................................................................................................................................................................... 728
Baetz, Carly...................................................................................................................................................................................... 719
404
Baglivio, Michael ..................................................................................................................................................................... 284, 912
Bailey, Danielle................................................................................................................................................................................ 784
Bailey, Diana ................................................................................................................................................................................... 072
Bailey, Frankie Yvonne .................................................................................................................................................................... 024
Bailey, Maldine B............................................................................................................................................................................. 556
Bain, Andy ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 354
Baker, David N......................................................................................................................................................................... 152, 871
Baker, Laura A. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 264
Baker, Ryan ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 010
Baker, Thomas ......................................................................................................................................................................... 018, 460
Bakiev, Erlan.................................................................................................................................................................................... 788
Bakken, Børge .................................................................................................................................................................................. 216
Bakken, Nicholas W. ................................................................................................................................................................ 108, 229
Balboni, Jennifer M.......................................................................................................................................................................... 254
Baldry, Eileen .................................................................................................................................................................................. 802
Baldwin, Julie Marie ........................................................................................................................................................ 052, 566, 880
Balemba, Samantha ......................................................................................................................................................................... 194
Bales, Bill .......................................................................................................................................... 053, 182, 229, 477, 789, 806, 911
Ball, Jonathan .................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Ball, Matthew ................................................................................................................................................................................... 231
Ballard, Ellen ................................................................................................................................................................... 142, 218, 749
Baltazar, Alina ................................................................................................................................................................................. 609
Banasiak, Richard ............................................................................................................................................................................ 091
Bandes, Susan A. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 205
Bang, Brandon Louis ....................................................................................................................................................................... 316
Bantley, Kathleen ............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Bao, Shuming ................................................................................................................................................................................... 805
Bao, Wan-Ning ................................................................................................................................................................................. 557
Barak, Gregg.................................................................................................................................................................................... 349
Barak, Maya Pagni .......................................................................................................................................................................... 297
Barbaro, Larissa .............................................................................................................................................................................. 633
Barber, Catherine ............................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Barberet, Rosemary ................................................................................................................................................. 037, 048, 118, 922
Barker, Edward D. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 440
Barker, Leon .................................................................................................................................................................................... 081
Barlow, Angela ................................................................................................................................................................................ 435
Barlow, David Edward .................................................................................................................................................................... 073
Barlow, Melissa Hickman ................................................................................................................................................................ 073
Barn, Ravinder ................................................................................................................................................................................. 507
Barnaby, Carlene ............................................................................................................................................................................. 143
Barnes, Allan.................................................................................................................................................................................... 419
Barnes, Ashlee R. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 207
Barnes, Geoffrey ...................................................................................................................................................................... 131, 902
Barnes, J.C. .......................................................................................................................................................078, 103, 343, 411, 714
Barnes-Ceeney, Kevin ...................................................................................................................................................................... 141
Barnett-Ryan, Cynthia ..................................................................................................................................................................... 615
Baron, Stephen ................................................................................................................................................................................. 448
Barr, Ashley ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 808
Barredo, Juan .................................................................................................................................................................................. 739
Barrett, Carla J. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 924
Barrett, Kimberly L. ................................................................................................................................................................. 785, 912
Barrick, Kelle ........................................................................................................................................................... 053, 200, 756, 923
Barrows, Julie .......................................................................................................................................................................... 204, 909
Bartgis, E. Elaine ............................................................................................................................................................................. 379
Barthe, Emmanuel.................................................................................................................................................................... 091, 728
Barton, Gina .................................................................................................................................................................................... 373
Barton, Michael S. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 412
Barton, William ................................................................................................................................................................................ 645
405
Basile, Kathleen ............................................................................................................................................................................... 425
Baskin, Deborah .............................................................................................................................................................................. 929
Baskin-Sommers, Arielle .................................................................................................................................................................. 929
Batcheller, Stephanie ....................................................................................................................................................................... 786
Batchelor, Susan Anusas .................................................................................................................................................................. 472
Bates, Ellie J.W. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bathurst, Cynthia L. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Batton, Candice................................................................................................................................................................................ 260
Baudains, Peter ................................................................................................................................................................................ 310
Bauer, Tim........................................................................................................................................................................................ 914
Baughman, Jonas ............................................................................................................................................................................. 210
Baum, Katrina .................................................................................................................................................................................. 818
Baumer, Eric ............................................................................................................................................................................ 198, 480
Bazemore, Gordon ................................................................................................................................................................... 582, 697
Beaudoin, Isabelle............................................................................................................................................................................ 197
Beauregard, Eric...................................................................................................................................................... 194, 462, 572, 737
Beaver, Kevin M. .......................................................................................................................................108, 127, 343, 411, 434, 884
Becerra-Munoz, Jose ....................................................................................................................................................................... 020
Beck, Adrian ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 143
Beck, Allen ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 092
Beck, Julie ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 249
Beck, Victoria ................................................................................................................................................................................... 155
Becker, Jacob H. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 187
Beckett, Katherine ............................................................................................................................................................................ 716
Beckley, Amber L. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 592
Bedard, Laura .................................................................................................................................................................................. 018
Begun, Audrey L............................................................................................................................................................................... 777
Behlendorf, Brandon ................................................................................................................................................................ 133, 480
Behrens, Candace ............................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Beichner, Dawn................................................................................................................................................................................ 882
Beier, Harald ................................................................................................................................................................................... 531
Beijers, Guillaume ........................................................................................................................................................................... 763
Bejinariu, Alexa ............................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Belenko, Steven .................................................................................................................................................054, 182, 499, 654, 912
Belknap, Joanne ........................................................................................................................................050, 116, 219, 429, 568, 877
Bell, Kerryn ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 230
Bell, Kristin ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 058
Bell, Linda Green ............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Bell, Valerie ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 659
Bellair, Paul E. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 085, 199
Bellandi, Rose .................................................................................................................................................................................. 421
Bellessa, Shannon Barton ................................................................................................................................................................ 915
Belshaw, Scott .................................................................................................................................................................................. 350
Ben-Moshe, Liat ............................................................................................................................................................................... 927
Ben-Yehuda, Nachman ............................................................................................................................................................. 279, 447
Benavides, Rosario........................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bender, Kimberly A. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 737
Beneby, Darren ................................................................................................................................................................................ 060
Benekos, Peter.................................................................................................................................................................................. 413
Bennett, Larry .................................................................................................................................................................................. 877
Bennett, Richard R. .................................................................................................................................................................. 114, 634
Bennett, Sarah A. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 153
Benoit, Ellen ............................................................................................................................................................................. 474, 700
Benson, Michael ....................................................................................................................................................................... 170, 713
Benson, Nancy.................................................................................................................................................................................. 590
Bent, Richard ................................................................................................................................................................................... 496
Berardi, Luca ................................................................................................................................................................................... 759
Berg, Mark ........................................................................................................................................................083, 264, 548, 808, 895
406
Bergen, Raquel Kennedy .................................................................................................................................................................. 116
Berglin, Emily J. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Berkowitz, Shari R............................................................................................................................................................................ 661
Berlin, Michael M. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Berlusconi, Giulia ............................................................................................................................................................ 442, 545, 762
Bernardeau, Marjorie ...................................................................................................................................................................... 639
Bernasco, Wim ......................................................................................................................................................................... 344, 718
Bernat, Frances................................................................................................................................................................................ 319
Bernburg, Jon Gunnar ..................................................................................................................................................................... 057
Bernstein, Deborah .......................................................................................................................................................................... 505
Berry, Bonnie ........................................................................................................................................................................... 218, 874
Bersani, Bianca ................................................................................................................................................................ 297, 444, 592
Besemer, Sytske ........................................................................................................................................................................ 530, 621
Beto, Dan Richard............................................................................................................................................................................ 450
Bevier, Landon Shane ...................................................................................................................................................... 124, 237, 733
Bezdjian, Serena .............................................................................................................................................................................. 264
Bhat, Meghna ................................................................................................................................................................................... 014
Bhati, Avi.......................................................................................................................................................................................... 665
Bibel, Daniel ............................................................................................................................................................................ 639, 722
Bierie, David M. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 292, 544
Bigler, Rose Johnson................................................................................................................................................................ 260, 455
Bijleveld, Catrien ..................................................................................................................................................... 530, 621, 701, 709
Birch, Ivan Gregory ......................................................................................................................................................................... 637
Birks, Daniel .................................................................................................................................................................................... 718
Birzer, Michael L. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 186
Bishopp, Stephen A. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 350
Bjerregaard, Beth............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Bjorgo, Tore ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 532
Bjornstrom, Eileen E. Spitznas......................................................................................................................................................... 363
Bjørnebekk, Ragnhild ....................................................................................................................................................................... 192
Blachman-Demner, Dara ................................................................................................................................................................. 865
Black, Michele.................................................................................................................................................................................. 425
Blackburn, Joseph ............................................................................................................................................................................ 313
Blackwell, Brenda Sims............................................................................................................................................ 218, 340, 461, 637
Blackwell, Kevin .............................................................................................................................................................................. 278
Blair, J. Pete .................................................................................................................................................................................... 544
Blair, Lesli................................................................................................................................................................................ 104, 912
Blais, Dominik.................................................................................................................................................................................. 512
Blais, Etienne ................................................................................................................................................................................... 197
Blandisi, Isabella ............................................................................................................................................................................. 887
Blankenship, Julia .................................................................................................................................................................... 023, 284
Blasdell, Raleigh .............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Blasko, Brandy L. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 020
Blazak, Randy .................................................................................................................................................................................. 913
Blitsa, Dimitra .................................................................................................................................................................................. 248
Block, Lauren ........................................................................................................................................................................... 254, 729
Block, Richard L. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 672
Block, Steven .................................................................................................................................................................................... 369
Bloemhof, Barb ................................................................................................................................................................................ 593
Blokland, Arjan ................................................................................................................................................................ 395, 621, 701
Blomberg, Thomas G. .............................................................................................................................................................. 262, 752
Blowers, Anita N. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 198
Blumenstein, Lindsey ....................................................................................................................................................................... 695
Blumstein, Alfred ...............................................................................................................................................137, 182, 375, 483, 755
Boateng, Francis Danso .................................................................................................................................................. 107, 572, 634
Boatright, John ................................................................................................................................................................................ 160
Boatwright, Jessica .......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bocker, Rosalyn Theresa .................................................................................................................................................................. 462
407
Boers, Klaus ............................................................................................................................................................................. 484, 825
Boessen, Adam ................................................................................................................................................................................. 441
Bogazianos, Dimitri ......................................................................................................................................................................... 276
Boggess, Lyndsay N. ................................................................................................................................................ 145, 318, 688, 785
Bogue, Bradford ............................................................................................................................................................................... 089
Bohm, Robert M. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 866
Boisvert, Danielle............................................................................................................................................................................. 713
Boivin, Remi ............................................................................................................................................................................. 201, 439
Boldt, Ethan D. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 636
Bolen, Jonathan ............................................................................................................................................................................... 205
Bolger, Philip Colin ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bologeorges, Stephanie Anastasia ................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bolton, Amanda................................................................................................................................................................ 154, 318, 572
Boman, John H......................................................................................................................................................................... 322, 687
Bond, Brenda ................................................................................................................................................................................... 041
Bond, Christine ................................................................................................................................................................ 053, 353, 880
Bones, Paul D.C. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 682
Bonfield, Miles Tarquin ................................................................................................................................................................... 740
Bonistall, Emily ................................................................................................................................................................................ 387
Bonn, Scott A.................................................................................................................................................................................... 803
Bonner, Heidi ................................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bonventre, Catherine L. ................................................................................................................................................................... 523
Boonstoppel, Sarah .......................................................................................................................................................................... 093
Booth, Scott C. ................................................................................................................................................................................. 690
Borakove, M. Elaine......................................................................................................................................................................... 431
Bordt, Rebecca L. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 525
Bornstein, Avram ............................................................................................................................................................................. 164
Borrego, Andrea R. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 553
Bosick, Stacey J. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 403
Bosma, Anouk Quirina ..................................................................................................................................................................... 102
Bossi, Michael .................................................................................................................................................................................. 459
Bossler, Adam M. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 487, 926
Botchkovar, Ekaterina ..................................................................................................................................................... 531, 587, 699
Bottia Noguera, Martha ................................................................................................................................................................... 290
Bottoms, Bette L. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 572, 661
Bouchard, Martin ...................................................................................................................... 069, 149, 167, 380, 416, 520, 572, 740
Bouffard, Jeffery A. .................................................................................................................................................................. 411, 572
Bouffard, Leana ............................................................................................................................................................... 312, 739, 883
Boulet-Gauthier, Chanele ................................................................................................................................................................ 328
Boulger, Jordan ............................................................................................................................................................................... 390
Boutwell, Brian B. .................................................................................................................................................... 021, 103, 343, 411
Bowen, Kendra Nicole ..................................................................................................................................................................... 197
Bower, Janine Ann ........................................................................................................................................................................... 476
Bower, Tim ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 660
Bowers, D. A. ................................................................................................................................................................................... 415
Bowers, James Henry ....................................................................................................................................................................... 744
Bowles, Paula .......................................................................................................................................................................... 117, 572
Bowles, Sarah Elizabeth .................................................................................................................................................................. 352
Bowman, David ................................................................................................................................................................................ 563
Boxer, Paul ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Boyd, Katharine ....................................................................................................................................................................... 152, 572
Boyd, Lorenzo M. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 419
Boyd, Neil ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 520
Boyle, Douglas J. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 428, 499
Boyle, Kaitlin M. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 647
Boyles, Andrea Shonetelle................................................................................................................................................................ 377
Bozin, Marie Angelete ...................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bracy, Nicole L. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 589
408
Bradley, Christopher ................................................................................................................................................................ 568, 646
Bradley, Mindy ......................................................................................................................................................................... 203, 404
Bradshaw, Elizabeth ........................................................................................................................................................................ 212
Bradstreet, Charlotte ....................................................................................................................................................................... 172
Bradstreet, Georgette ....................................................................................................................................................................... 368
Braga, Anthony A. .................................................................................................................................................................... 432, 580
Brain, Georgianna ........................................................................................................................................................................... 784
Braithwaite, Helen ........................................................................................................................................................... 356, 572, 643
Braithwaite, Jeremy ......................................................................................................................................................................... 820
Brame, Robert .......................................................................................................................................................................... 466, 760
Bramm, Stephanie M. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Branch, Sara .................................................................................................................................................................................... 265
Brandl, Mary Beth............................................................................................................................................................................ 690
Branic, Nicholas ...................................................................................................................................................................... 022, 318
Brantingham, P. Jeffrey ................................................................................................................................................................... 442
Brantingham, Patricia ..................................................................................................................................................................... 496
Brantingham, Paul ................................................................................................................................................................... 225, 352
Brants, Chrisje ................................................................................................................................................................................. 382
Brar, Gurjeet Kaur ........................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bratton, Jason .................................................................................................................................................................................. 127
Brauer, Jonathan R. ................................................................................................................................................................. 234, 646
Breaux, Justin .................................................................................................................................................................. 492, 623, 669
Brecklin, Leanne .............................................................................................................................................................................. 502
Breeden, Kimberly ........................................................................................................................................................................... 714
Breen, Clairissa D............................................................................................................................................................................ 228
Breetzke, Gregory D. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 624
Breiding, Matthew ............................................................................................................................................................................ 425
Brendgen, Mara ............................................................................................................................................................................... 440
Brennan, Pauline K. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 101
Brennan, Tim.................................................................................................................................................................... 064, 322, 451
Brent, John ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 129
Brewer, Russell ................................................................................................................................................................................ 114
Brewer, Steven L. ............................................................................................................................................................. 324, 422, 572
Brewster, Mary ................................................................................................................................................................ 031, 059, 481
Brezina, Timothy .............................................................................................................................................................................. 142
Briddell, Laine ................................................................................................................................................................................. 918
Briggs, Jeremy Stone........................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Briggs, Steven .................................................................................................................................................................................. 241
Brightman, Hank J. .................................................................................................................................................................. 111, 829
Brightman, Sarah ............................................................................................................................................................................. 357
Briney, John ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 720
Brion, Fabienne ............................................................................................................................................................................... 612
Briones-Robinson, Rhissa ................................................................................................................................................................ 912
Brisman, Avi ............................................................................................................................................................. 224, 386, 814, 924
Britt, Chester L. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 189, 667
Britto, Sarah ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 597
Broadway, Akbar ............................................................................................................................................................................. 200
Brochu, Serge ................................................................................................................................................................................... 705
Brodie, Neil ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 899
Bromirski, Delene ............................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Broner, Nahama ............................................................................................................................................................................... 200
Brookman, Fiona Jane ..................................................................................................................................................................... 791
Brooks, Alison .......................................................................................................................................................................... 128, 165
Brooks, Robert ................................................................................................................................................................................. 124
Brooks Dollar, Cindy ............................................................................................................................................................... 332, 338
Brooks-Gunn, Jeanne ....................................................................................................................................................................... 761
Brotherton, David Charles ............................................................................................................................................... 113, 247, 703
Brown, Alison McKenney ................................................................................................................................................................. 070
409
Brown, Bethany ................................................................................................................................................................................ 251
Brown, Cynthia ................................................................................................................................................................................ 579
Brown, David ................................................................................................................................................................................... 802
Brown, Elizabeth K. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 549
Brown, Eric ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 720
Brown, Geneva ................................................................................................................................................................................. 236
Brown, Gregory Chris...................................................................................................................................................................... 836
Brown, Jennifer M.................................................................................................................................................................... 477, 572
Brown, LaDonna .............................................................................................................................................................................. 591
Brown, Michael P. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 291
Brown, Michelle ....................................................................................................................................................................... 307, 814
Brown, Robert .......................................................................................................................................................................... 235, 419
Brown, Sheryll J. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 605
Brown, Stephen E. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 660
Brown, Susan L. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 873
Brown, William ........................................................................................................................................................................ 396, 901
Brown, Wyatt .................................................................................................................................................................................... 904
Browne, Angela ................................................................................................................................................................................ 009
Browning, Christopher R. ................................................................................................................................................ 044, 225, 521
Browning, Sarah ...................................................................................................................................................................... 052, 919
Brownlee, Vernon............................................................................................................................................................................. 361
Brownstein, Henry H........................................................................................................................................................................ 125
Bruckmueller, Karin......................................................................................................................................................................... 037
Bruell, Christopher E. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 234
Bruinsma, Gerben J.N. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 344
Brumbaugh, Susan ........................................................................................................................................................................... 129
Brunson, Rod K. ....................................................................................................................................................... 095, 163, 206, 555
Brunton-Smith, Ian ........................................................................................................................................................................... 189
Brushett, Rachel ............................................................................................................................................................................... 659
Brusman-Lovins, Lori ...................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bryant, Angela ................................................................................................................................................................................. 708
Bryant, Kevin M. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 926
Bryant, Robin ................................................................................................................................................................................... 372
Brydon, Deborah J. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 550
Bubolz, Bryan ........................................................................................................................................................................... 181, 824
Bucerius, Sandra M.......................................................................................................................................................... 281, 703, 759
Buchanan, Molly .............................................................................................................................................................................. 298
Buck Willison, Janeen ...................................................................................................................................................................... 089
Bucklen, Kristofer Bret .................................................................................................................................................... 020, 071, 142
Buckler, Kevin Glenn ............................................................................................................................................................... 010, 259
Budd, Kristen ................................................................................................................................................................................... 383
Bufkin, Jana ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Bui, Hoan Ngoc ................................................................................................................................................................................ 689
Buist, Carrie ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 042
Bullock, Jessica ................................................................................................................................................................................ 550
Bumbarger, Brian K. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 265
Bumgarner, Jeff................................................................................................................................................................................ 204
Bunch, Jackson ................................................................................................................................................................................ 908
Burchfield, Keri B. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 086
Burgason, Kyle ................................................................................................................................................................................. 055
Burgess-Proctor, Amanda ................................................................................................................................................ 226, 298, 376
Burke, Alison S. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 600
Burke, Cynthia ................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Burke, Tod ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 330
Burkes, Kaleena J. ........................................................................................................................................................... 229, 572, 911
Burkett, Jason .................................................................................................................................................................................. 473
Burkett, Tracy .................................................................................................................................................................................. 180
Burman, Michele Jane ............................................................................................................................................................. 472, 572
410
Burmon, Kate Melody ...................................................................................................................................................................... 899
Burns, Heather ......................................................................................................................................................... 062, 414, 459, 728
Burns, Ronald .................................................................................................................................................................................. 204
Burrow, John D. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 807
Burruss, George W. .................................................................................................................................................................. 156, 487
Bursik, Robert .......................................................................................................................................................... 045, 402, 619, 755
Burt, Callie Harbin .................................................................................................................................................................. 416, 692
Burton, Catherine............................................................................................................................................................................. 928
Burton, Jr., Velmer S. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 598
Busch-Armendariz, Noel .................................................................................................................................................................. 896
Bush, Michael D............................................................................................................................................................................... 890
Bush-Baskette, Stephanie ................................................................................................................................................................. 276
Bushway, Shawn ............................................................................................................................... 334, 383, 466, 572, 636, 681, 790
Butchart, Robert Alexander ............................................................................................................................................................. 764
Butler, Stephanie .............................................................................................................................................................................. 708
Butters, Rob.............................................................................................................................................................................. 413, 466
Button, Deeanna .............................................................................................................................................................................. 491
Butts, Carter T. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 441
Butts, Jeff.................................................................................................................................................................................. 347, 674
Bybee, Deborah................................................................................................................................................................................ 378
Bynum, Timothy ....................................................................................................................................................................... 547, 585
Byoun, Soo-Jung ...................................................................................................................................................................... 502, 702
Byrne, James ............................................................................................................................................................ 456, 643, 737, 784
Byrne, Mary W. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 913
Byun, Sung-hun ................................................................................................................................................................................ 029
Byxbe, Ferris Roger ................................................................................................................................................................. 554, 560
C
Cadigan, Robert T. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 259
Cahill, Katelyn ................................................................................................................................................................................. 082
Cahill, Meagan ........................................................................................................................................................................ 412, 504
Cain, Calli ................................................................................................................................................................................ 086, 185
Calathes, William ..................................................................................................................................................................... 063, 924
Caldeira, Kimberly M. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 823
Calderoni, Francesco....................................................................................................................................................................... 898
Caldwell, Keirra .............................................................................................................................................................................. 319
Cale, Jesse........................................................................................................................................................................................ 737
Calhoun, Stacy ................................................................................................................................................................................. 749
Callanan, Valerie ............................................................................................................................................................................. 748
Cam, Taner ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 149
Camargo, Esperanza ........................................................................................................................................................................ 152
Camastra, Michael ........................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Cameron, Katherine A. .................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Campbell, Bradley A. ....................................................................................................................................................... 121, 816, 896
Campbell, Bradley K. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 830
Campbell, Christina A...................................................................................................................................................................... 207
Campbell, Christopher M. ....................................................................................................................................................... 729, 881
Campbell, Jacqueline ....................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Campbell, Jacquelyn ........................................................................................................................................................................ 588
Campbell, Michael C. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 787
Campeau, Holly ............................................................................................................................................................................... 328
Can, Salih Hakan ............................................................................................................................................................................. 514
Caneppele, Stefano........................................................................................................................................................................... 898
Cannon, Kevin D. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 322
Cano, Mario ............................................................................................................................................................................. 227, 242
Cantara, Patricia ............................................................................................................................................................................. 562
411
Cantella, Jennifer ............................................................................................................................................................................. 100
Cantor, David .................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Cantora, Andrea ...................................................................................................................................................................... 200, 321
Cao, Liqun................................................................................................................................................................................ 087, 188
Capehart, Andrew ............................................................................................................................................................................ 161
Capellan, Joel .................................................................................................................................................................................. 067
Caplan, Joel M. ........................................................................................................................................................ 079, 210, 339, 763
Capowich, George E. ....................................................................................................................................................... 145, 196, 267
Capps, Jennifer Elizabeth ................................................................................................................................................................ 362
Caputo, Angela ................................................................................................................................................................................ 373
Caputo-Levine, Deirdre ................................................................................................................................................................... 147
Caravelis Hughes, Cyndy ................................................................................................................................................................. 146
Caraway, Angela.............................................................................................................................................................................. 488
Carbone-Lopez, Kristin ............................................................................................................................................................ 379, 929
Carcach, Carlos ............................................................................................................................................................................... 439
Cardoso, Carla Sofia ............................................................................................................................................... 154, 323, 557, 886
Cardwell, Stephanie M. .................................................................................................................................................................... 187
Cares, Alison .................................................................................................................................................................................... 590
Caringella, Susan ............................................................................................................................................................................. 423
Carleton, Rebecca ............................................................................................................................................................ 104, 190, 572
Carlock, Arna L. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 181, 741
Carlson, Corey R. ............................................................................................................................................................ 467, 596, 793
Carlson, Susan M. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 084
Carlsson, Christoffer ........................................................................................................................................................................ 359
Carmichael, Dalisha K. ................................................................................................................................................................... 780
Carmody, Dianne Cyr ...................................................................................................................................................................... 429
Carnevale, Eloise M. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Carr, Christine ................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Carr, Patrick ............................................................................................................................................................................ 163, 696
Carr, Renatto V. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 106
Carrabine, Eamonn.......................................................................................................................................................................... 307
Carrano, Julia .................................................................................................................................................................................. 305
Carreon, Diana L. .................................................................................................................................................................... 052, 572
Carriaga, Michael LeAnn ................................................................................................................................................................ 103
Carrillo, Karise Marise ............................................................................................................................................................ 572, 603
Carrington, Kerry .................................................................................................................................................................... 295, 323
Carroll, Matthew .............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Carrothers, David ............................................................................................................................................................................ 475
Carson, Dena ................................................................................................................................................................... 699, 753, 836
Carson, E. Ann ................................................................................................................................................................................. 605
Carson, Jennifer ............................................................................................................................................................... 240, 357, 572
Carter, Allison.................................................................................................................................................................................. 360
Carter, Jeremy G...................................................................................................................................................................... 015, 917
Carter, Khirin .................................................................................................................................................................................. 832
Carter, Lisa ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 331
Case, Andrew ................................................................................................................................................................................... 470
Cass, Amy ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 062
Cassidy, Michael .............................................................................................................................................................................. 150
Castillo, Jason.................................................................................................................................................................................. 355
Castle, Tammy .................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Castro, Josefina Maria .................................................................................................................................................... 025, 154, 557
Catalano, Richard .................................................................................................................................................................... 449, 720
Catalano, Shannan ................................................................................................................................................................... 092, 572
Catallozzi, Marina ........................................................................................................................................................................... 325
Caudy, Michael S. .................................................................................................................................................................... 666, 895
Cavanaugh, Michael R. .................................................................................................................................................................... 178
Cave, Breanne .................................................................................................................................................................................. 721
Cavendish, Wendy ............................................................................................................................................................................ 572
412
Cebulak, Wojciech ........................................................................................................................................................................... 028
Ceccato, Vania ................................................................................................................................................................. 070, 462, 886
Cecil, Dawn K. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 387, 870
Celaya, Adrienne.............................................................................................................................................................................. 747
Celinska, Katarzyna ......................................................................................................................................................................... 792
Cepeda, Alice ........................................................................................................................................................................... 219, 361
Cepeda Borrero, Jose R. .................................................................................................................................................................. 011
Cermak, Jennifer .............................................................................................................................................................................. 499
Cerniglia, Lenore ............................................................................................................................................................................. 828
Cerulli, Catherine ............................................................................................................................................................ 236, 408, 786
Cesar, Gabriel T. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 592, 783
Cesaroni, Carla ........................................................................................................................................................................ 166, 472
Chaddha, Anmol .............................................................................................................................................................................. 254
Chae, Young Ju ................................................................................................................................................................................ 689
Chagnon, Nicholas James ........................................................................................................................................................ 010, 920
Chahal, Jaspreet .............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Chamard, Sharon ............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Chamberlain, Alyssa Whitby .................................................................................................................................................... 085, 145
Chamberlain, Kate ........................................................................................................................................................................... 139
Chamlin, Mitchell B. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Champion, David R. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 072
Chang, Lennon Yao-chung ............................................................................................................................................................... 068
Chang, Rosa ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Chanin, Joshua ................................................................................................................................................................................ 593
Chapman, Gabrielle Lynn ................................................................................................................................................................ 253
Chappell, Allison Taylor .................................................................................................................................................................. 148
Chapple, Constance ......................................................................................................................................................... 256, 780, 835
Charlier, Jac .................................................................................................................................................................................... 041
Chase, Brandon................................................................................................................................................................................ 595
Chauhan, Preeti ............................................................................................................................................................................... 719
Chavez, Jorge M. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 191, 475
Chaviano, Nicholas .......................................................................................................................................................................... 127
Cheeseman, Kelly ............................................................................................................................................................................. 662
Cheesman, Fred Louis ..................................................................................................................................................................... 626
Chelbegean, Romulus....................................................................................................................................................................... 609
Cheliotis, Leonidas........................................................................................................................................................................... 063
Chemers, Betty ................................................................................................................................................................................. 347
Chen, Frances .................................................................................................................................................................................. 215
Chen, Xiaojin ................................................................................................................................................................................... 232
Chenane, Joselyne L. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 555
Chenault, Scott ......................................................................................................................................................................... 357, 572
Chenoweth, Erica ............................................................................................................................................................................. 133
Cherbonneau, Michael ..................................................................................................................................................................... 651
Cherkauskas, Jennifer Calnon ......................................................................................................................................................... 241
Chermak, Steven ...................................................................................................................................................... 109, 240, 518, 648
Cherukuri, Suvarna .......................................................................................................................................................................... 876
Chester, Hilary ................................................................................................................................................................................. 158
Cheyne, Nicola ................................................................................................................................................................................. 607
Chiancone, Janet.............................................................................................................................................................................. 758
Childs, Kristina ................................................................................................................................................................................ 284
Chilton, Bradley Stewart .................................................................................................................................................................. 227
Chilton, Roland ................................................................................................................................................................................ 722
Chin, Nancy...................................................................................................................................................................................... 236
Chiricos, Ted ............................................................................................................................................................ 053, 106, 198, 815
Chiu, Yu-Ling ........................................................................................................................................................................... 572, 792
Cho, Byung Jun ........................................................................................................................................................................ 157, 891
Cho, Chi C. ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 706
Cho, Sujung ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 572
413
Cho, Yeok-il.............................................................................................................................................................................. 561, 572
Cho, Younoh ............................................................................................................................................................................. 029, 572
Choi, Jisun ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 145
Choi, Kyung-shick ............................................................................................................................................................................ 323
Chon, Don Soo ................................................................................................................................................................................. 885
Choo, Kyungseok ............................................................................................................................................................................. 584
Choo, Tae ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 729
Choy, Olivia ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 673
Chrisco, Emelia Siobhan.................................................................................................................................................................. 379
Christensen Hughes, Julia ............................................................................................................................................................... 593
Christian, Johnna ..................................................................................................................................................................... 689, 882
Chrusciel, Margaret M. ................................................................................................................................................................... 919
Chu, Doris ................................................................................................................................................................................ 363, 691
Chu, Hongyun .................................................................................................................................................................................. 830
Chu, Rebekah ................................................................................................................................................................................... 741
Chu, Vivian ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 041
Chung, Hyewon ................................................................................................................................................................................ 152
Chwialkowski, Paul .......................................................................................................................................................................... 227
Cihan, Abdullah ............................................................................................................................................................................... 606
Cintron, Myrna ................................................................................................................................................................................ 011
Cissner, Amanda .............................................................................................................................................................. 431, 533, 865
Clark, Bobby .................................................................................................................................................................................... 810
Clark, Catie Lynn ..................................................................................................................................................................... 789, 911
Clark, David D. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 102
Clark, Jim ......................................................................................................................................................................................... 064
Clark, Valerie ................................................................................................................................................................................... 352
Clay-Warner, Jody ................................................................................................................................................................... 647, 908
Clear, Emily ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 750
Clear, Todd .............................................................................................................................................................. 088, 293, 471, 501
Clemons, Katie Lynn ................................................................................................................................................................ 473, 521
Cleveland, H. Harrington ................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Clevenger, Shelly ............................................................................................................................................................................. 331
Clifford, Janice ................................................................................................................................................................................ 288
Clifford, Mary .................................................................................................................................................................................. 341
Clinkinbeard, Samantha................................................................................................................................................................... 039
Clodfelter, Tammatha .............................................................................................................................................................. 290, 469
Clow, Kimberley A. .................................................................................................................................................................. 572, 887
Clubb, Audrey .................................................................................................................................................................................. 495
Clutter, Jeffrey E. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 241
Cobb, Pamela Denise ....................................................................................................................................................................... 322
Cobbina, Jennifer ............................................................................................................................................................. 046, 798, 895
Cobbs, Rochelle E. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 156
Cochran, John K. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 106, 178
Cochran, Joshua C. .................................................................................................................................................................. 108, 182
Coggeshall, Mark ............................................................................................................................................................................. 526
Cohen, Derek ................................................................................................................................................................... 368, 419, 917
Cohen, Jeff W. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 124, 920
Cohen, Marcia ......................................................................................................................................................................... 346, 781
Cohen, Thomas H............................................................................................................................................................................. 910
Cohn, Ellen G........................................................................................................................................................................... 624, 925
Coker, Ann ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 750
Colanese, Jennifer ............................................................................................................................................................ 182, 321, 457
Colarusso, J. Andrew ....................................................................................................................................................................... 411
Coldren, Jr., James R. .............................................................................................................................................................. 091, 143
Collica, Kimberly ............................................................................................................................................................................. 117
Collier-Goubil, Deshonna ................................................................................................................................................................ 361
Collins, Catherine ............................................................................................................................................................................ 379
Collins, Peter A. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 205, 254
414
Collins, Sue Carter ........................................................................................................................................................................... 579
Collins, Victoria ....................................................................................................................................................................... 084, 491
Coltharp, Philip ............................................................................................................................................................................... 789
Colyer, Corey ................................................................................................................................................................................... 383
Comfort, Megan ............................................................................................................................................................................... 601
Condry, Rachel ........................................................................................................................................................................ 418, 658
Conley, Jamison ............................................................................................................................................................................... 459
Connell, Nadine ............................................................................................................................................................................... 277
Connolly, Eric J. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 127
Connor, David Patrick ..................................................................................................................................................................... 071
Conopio, Kathryn ............................................................................................................................................................................. 609
Conover-Williams, Meredith ............................................................................................................................................................ 521
Conway, Peggy "Margaret" ............................................................................................................................................................. 806
Cook, Carrie .................................................................................................................................................................................... 062
Cook, Kimberly ................................................................................................................................................................ 049, 340, 878
Cook, Philip J................................................................................................................................................................................... 433
Cooke, Barbara ................................................................................................................................................................................ 872
Cooney, Mark ........................................................................................................................................................................... 119, 137
Cooney, Mikaela .............................................................................................................................................................................. 292
Cooper, Alexia ................................................................................................................................................................................. 040
Cooper, Jonathon A. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 205
Cooper, Maisha Nichole .................................................................................................................................................................. 561
Copeland, Kim ................................................................................................................................................................................. 141
Copenhaver, Michael ....................................................................................................................................................................... 054
Copes, Heith ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 651
Copp, Jennifer .................................................................................................................................................................................. 325
Corcoran, Mary ............................................................................................................................................................................... 746
Cornacchione, Jennifer .................................................................................................................................................................... 046
Cornell, Dewey ................................................................................................................................................................................ 883
Coroian, George .............................................................................................................................................................................. 544
Corrado, Raymond R. .............................................................................................................................................. 285, 560, 741, 824
Corrales, Sonia ................................................................................................................................................................................ 896
Corsaro, Nicholas ............................................................................................................................................................................ 528
Corsianos, Marilyn .......................................................................................................................................................................... 042
Cortez, Dimas .................................................................................................................................................................................. 164
Corzine, Jay ............................................................................................................................................................................. 243, 370
Cosemans, Zoë ................................................................................................................................................................................. 686
Cosma, Ioana ................................................................................................................................................................................... 789
Costa, Elise ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 343
Costanza, S. E. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 141, 415
Costello, Barbara ..................................................................................................................................................................... 078, 667
Costigan, Adele ................................................................................................................................................................................ 430
Coston, Charisse T.M....................................................................................................................................................... 075, 243, 611
Cotton, Allison M. .................................................................................................................................................................... 773, 894
Couture, Amanda ............................................................................................................................................................................. 184
Couvrette, Amelie ............................................................................................................................................................................. 705
Covington, Jeanette .......................................................................................................................................................................... 278
Covington, Michele .......................................................................................................................................................................... 144
Cox, Alexandra ................................................................................................................................................................................ 452
Cox, Amanda .................................................................................................................................................................................... 331
Cox, Terry Carl ................................................................................................................................................................................ 831
Coyle, Michael J. ..................................................................................................................................................................... 198, 516
Coyne, Michelle Anne .............................................................................................................................................................. 343, 713
Craft, Shonda ................................................................................................................................................................................... 598
Craig, Jessica ................................................................................................................................................................................... 026
Cramer, Lindsey ............................................................................................................................................................................... 371
Crank, Beverly R. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 460
Crank, John .............................................................................................................................................................................. 291, 360
415
Craun, Sarah Welchans ........................................................................................................................................................... 292, 544
Crawford, Charles ........................................................................................................................................................................... 204
Crawford, Geniece A........................................................................................................................................................................ 777
Crawford, Timothy ........................................................................................................................................................................... 750
Crayton, Lee ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 007
Cregg, Stephanie .............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Cretacci, Michael ............................................................................................................................................................................. 290
Crichlow, Vaughn Joel ..................................................................................................................................................................... 211
Crisafi, Denise ................................................................................................................................................................................. 747
Crissman, Belinda Rochelle ............................................................................................................................................................. 562
Crites, Erin ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 666
Crittenden, Courtney A. ................................................................................................................................................................... 378
Crocitti, Stefania .............................................................................................................................................................................. 281
Cronin, Shea W. ............................................................................................................................................................................... 728
Cross, Theodore P............................................................................................................................................................................ 639
Crossland, Christine ........................................................................................................................................................................ 128
Crow, Matthew S. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 156
Crowl, Justin Nicholas ............................................................................................................................................................. 323, 465
Crutchfield, Robert D. .............................................................................................................................................................. 206, 449
Cruz, Ken ................................................................................................................................................................................. 249, 903
Cruze, Jennifer Rose ........................................................................................................................................................................ 637
Cryer-Coupet, Qiana ....................................................................................................................................................................... 501
Cubellis, Michelle ............................................................................................................................................................................ 358
Cuevas, Carlos A. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 795
Cukier, Michel .......................................................................................................................................................................... 388, 738
Cullen, Francis T. ............................................................................................................................. 148, 192, 293, 598, 619, 667, 801
Culp, Richard F. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 016
Cumley, Samantha R. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 549
Cundiff, Patrick ........................................................................................................................................................................ 238, 808
Cunneen, Chris ........................................................................................................................................................................ 715, 802
Cunningham, David ......................................................................................................................................................................... 394
Cuquerella, Angel ............................................................................................................................................................................ 350
Curcio, Gina A. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 071
Currie, Elliott ................................................................................................................................................................... 249, 335, 903
Curry, Glen David............................................................................................................................................................................ 336
Curtis, Kristin .................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Curtis, Ric ................................................................................................................................................................................ 164, 626
Cusick, Gretchen R. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Cwick, Jaclyn ................................................................................................................................................................................... 281
Czerwińska-Jakimiuk, Ewa .............................................................................................................................................................. 572
D
D'Angelo, Jill M. .............................................................................................................................................................................. 882
D'Unger, Amy .................................................................................................................................................................................. 301
da Agra, Cândido ..................................................................................................................................................................... 154, 557
Dabney, Dean .................................................................................................................................................................................. 693
Daday, Jerry K. ................................................................................................................................................................................ 061
Daems, Tom ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 684
Daftary-Kapur, Tarika ............................................................................................................................................................. 775, 880
Dahl, Patricia Preston ..................................................................................................................................................................... 511
Dahle, Thorvald ....................................................................................................................................................................... 525, 605
Dai, Mengyan ................................................................................................................................................................... 252, 363, 499
Daigle, Leah ......................................................................................................................................................179, 325, 461, 647, 908
Daly, Reagan.................................................................................................................................................................................... 757
Daly, Sarah Elizabet ........................................................................................................................................................................ 501
Damphousse, Kayleigh Elise ............................................................................................................................................................ 464
416
Damphousse, Kelly R. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 240
Daniels, Jeff ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 617
Dank, Meredith ........................................................................................................................................................ 670, 756, 865, 923
Danner, Mona J. .............................................................................................................................................................. 237, 295, 799
Das, Dilip K. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 364, 657
Das, Shyamal ................................................................................................................................................................................... 510
Daskalou, Manos ..................................................................................................................................................................... 117, 572
Dass-Brailsford, Priscilla ................................................................................................................................................................ 219
Dathorne, Souyenne ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Davenport, Dylan ............................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Davenport, Ryan Aaron ........................................................................................................................................................... 154, 789
Davidson, Janet................................................................................................................................................................................ 556
Davidson, Judith .............................................................................................................................................................................. 527
Davidson, Leslie ............................................................................................................................................................................... 325
Davidson, William S. ........................................................................................................................................................................ 207
Davie, Laura .................................................................................................................................................................................... 803
Davies, Garth ........................................................................................................................................................... 057, 104, 345, 572
Davila, Wilma .................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Davis, Clinton .................................................................................................................................................................................. 459
Davis, Jacqueline ............................................................................................................................................................................. 529
Davis, Jason ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 545
Davis, Karen .................................................................................................................................................................................... 499
Davis, Lois ............................................................................................................................................................................... 100, 734
Davis, Mark S................................................................................................................................................................................... 874
Davis, Matthew ................................................................................................................................................................................ 195
Davis, Meredith M. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 547
Davis, Sherree R.B. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 317
Davis Rodrigues, Corinne ................................................................................................................................................................ 266
Dawe, Meghan ................................................................................................................................................................................. 077
Dawson, Lisa.................................................................................................................................................................................... 309
Dawson, Stephanie E. ...................................................................................................................................................................... 057
Dawson-Edwards, B. Cherie ............................................................................................................................................................ 604
Day, George ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 584
Day, Jacob ....................................................................................................................................................................................... 588
Day, Susan Elaine ............................................................................................................................................................................ 697
De Angelis, Joseph T. ....................................................................................................................................................................... 690
De Caires, Richard Joseph .............................................................................................................................................................. 196
De Coster, Stacy ............................................................................................................................................................................... 199
De Cuyper, Ruben ............................................................................................................................................................................ 521
De Giorgi, Alessandro ..................................................................................................................................................................... 093
de Guzman, Melchor ................................................................................................................................................................ 073, 572
de Keijser, Jan W. .............................................................................................................................................066, 235, 789, 887, 910
De La Rue, Lisa................................................................................................................................................................................ 304
de Lange, Evianne ............................................................................................................................................................................ 887
Deabler, Kelsey ................................................................................................................................................................................ 260
Dean, Collin ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 562
Dean, Geoff ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 240
Death, Jodi ............................................................................................................................................................................... 014, 295
DeBarr, Mark ................................................................................................................................................................................... 201
Debus-Sherrill, Sara Ann ................................................................................................................................................. 263, 550, 595
DeCarlo, John .................................................................................................................................................................. 098, 351, 572
Decary-Hetu, David ......................................................................................................................................................................... 456
Deckard, Michael J. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Decker, Melissa ................................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Decker, Scott .............................................................................................................................................044, 362, 471, 487, 532, 601
Deger, Amy W. ................................................................................................................................................................................. 572
Degner, Jürgen ........................................................................................................................................................................ 454, 596
DeHart, Dana .................................................................................................................................................................. 219, 429, 568
417
DeJong, Christina .................................................................................................................................................................... 119, 376
DeKeseredy, Walter S. ..............................................................................................................................013, 116, 211, 425, 727, 814
DeLeeuw, Joseph ..................................................................................................................................................................... 082, 827
Delgado, Shela A.............................................................................................................................................................................. 449
Della Giustina, Jo-Ann .................................................................................................................................................................... 664
DeLone, Gregory J. .......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
DeLone, Miriam A............................................................................................................................................................................ 572
Delong, Rhonda Kaye ...................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Dembo, Richard ............................................................................................................................................................................... 912
DeMichele, Jennifer ......................................................................................................................................................................... 664
DeMichele, Matthew ................................................................................................................................................................ 053, 290
Demidov, Nicolai N. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 364
Dempsey, Tamara ............................................................................................................................................................................ 914
Demuth, Stephen .............................................................................................................................................................................. 873
Den Heyer, Garth ............................................................................................................................................................................. 364
Deng, Xiaogang ............................................................................................................................................................... 453, 510, 743
Denney, Andrew Stephen ................................................................................................................................................................. 468
Dennis, Kimya N. ............................................................................................................................................................................. 515
Dennison, Susan ............................................................................................................................................................................... 607
Denno, Deborah ............................................................................................................................................................................... 779
Denton, Erin ............................................................................................................................................................................. 030, 659
Denver, Megan ................................................................................................................................................................. 492, 818, 868
Descormiers, Karine ........................................................................................................................................................................ 572
DeShay, Rashaan A. ......................................................................................................................................................................... 572
Deslauriers-Varin, Nadine ............................................................................................................................................................... 572
Detar, Paul J. ........................................................................................................................................................................... 292, 544
Deuchar, Ross .................................................................................................................................................................................. 528
DeVall, Kristen E. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 072
Devers, Lindsey ................................................................................................................................................................................ 409
DeWitt, Samuel E. ............................................................................................................................................................................ 066
Dey, Eugene ..................................................................................................................................................................................... 336
Dhamija, Devika .............................................................................................................................................................................. 264
Dhondt, Geert .................................................................................................................................................................................. 885
Dhungana, Karla ..................................................................................................................................................................... 018, 820
Di Marco, Moreno ........................................................................................................................................................................... 743
Di Pietro, Stephanie ......................................................................................................................................................... 281, 345, 592
Diamond, Brie .................................................................................................................................................................................. 108
Diaz-Barriga, Miguel ....................................................................................................................................................................... 581
Dickinson, George ........................................................................................................................................................................... 180
Dickinson, Timothy .................................................................................................................................................................. 081, 163
Diederich, Christian......................................................................................................................................................................... 419
Dieterich, William ............................................................................................................................................................ 064, 322, 451
Digard, Leon .................................................................................................................................................................................... 321
Diih, Sorle Stanley ........................................................................................................................................................................... 144
Dillon, Luke...................................................................................................................................................................................... 751
Dimkov, Trajce ................................................................................................................................................................................. 031
DioGuardi, Sherri ............................................................................................................................................................................ 055
Dirks, Danielle ................................................................................................................................................................................. 076
Dirkzwager, Anja ..............................................................................................................................................066, 102, 521, 601, 910
Dishon, Amanda J. ................................................................................................................................................................... 568, 705
Distler, Michael ............................................................................................................................................................................... 444
Dixon, Shane .................................................................................................................................................................................... 682
Dobbs, Rhonda R. .....................

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