Sisouvanh Keopanapay, senior academic advisor/internship coordinator, criminal justice and criminology, co-presented “Xenophobia, Anti-Asian Racism and Intolerance: How to Support Students, Faculty, and Staff During COVID-19” in the National Academic Advising Association’s Global Connection Series.
Mary Stohr and Dale Willits, professors, and Nicholas Lovrich, professor emeritus, criminal justice and criminology, presented “The Effects of Marijuana Legalization on Law Enforcement and Crime” to the National Institute of Justice Working Group of U.S. Attorneys.
Laurie Drapela and Zachary K. Hamilton, associate professors, Melissa Kowalski, ElizabethThompson Tollefsbol, and Youngki Woo, doctoral candidates, and Mary K. Stohr, professor, criminal justice and criminology, coauthored with a colleague “Understanding Offender Needs over Forms of Isolation using a Repeated Measures Design” inThe Prison Journal.
Drapela and Tollefsbol with Faith E. Lutze, professor, and Nicholas Pimley, doctoral candidate, also coauthored “Assessing the Behavior and Needs Veterans with Traumatic Brain Injury in Washington State Prisons: Establishing a Foundation for Policy, Practice, and Education” in Justice Quarterly.
In addition, Drapela, Woo, Stohr, Hamilton, Tollefsbol, Xiaohan Mei, doctoral candidate, and a colleague coauthored “The Effects of Disciplinary Segregation on Offender Behavior: Institutional and Community Outcomes” in Criminal Justice Policy Review.
Melissa Kowalski, doctoral candidate, Zachary Hamilton, associate professor, and Alex Kigerl, assistant research professor, criminal justice, coauthored with a colleague “Recrafting Youth Risk Assessment: Developing the Modified Positive Achievement Change Tool for Iowa” in Deviant Behavior.
Leah Ruiz and Brianne Posey, doctoral students, Melanie-Angela Neuilly, associate professor, and Craig Hemmens and Mary Stohr, professors, criminal justice and criminology, coauthored “Certifying Death in the United States” in Journal of Forensic Sciences. Their article also was selected as a “2018 Noteworthy Article” by the journal editors.
Brandon Bang and Duane Stanton, doctoral candidates, and Craig Hemmens and Mary Stohr, professors, criminal justice, coauthored “Police Recording of Custodial Interrogations: A State-By-State Legal Inquiry” in Journal of Police Science & Management.
Melissa Kowalski, doctorate candidate, Mei Xiaohan, doctorate student, Mary Stohr, professor, and Craig Hemmens, professor, criminal justice and criminology, authored “A statute analysis: Correction officer’s sexual misconduct” in The Prison Journal (forthcoming).
Melissa Kowalski, doctorate candidate, criminal justice and criminology, authored “Hiring and training requirements for correctional officers: A statutory analysis” in The Prison Journal (forthcoming).
David Makin and professor, Dale Willits, assistant professors; Mary Stohr and Craig Hemmens, professors; Wendy Koslicki, Duane Stanton, and John Snyder, doctorate students, criminal justice and criminology, and Nicholas Lovrich, regents professor emeritus, politics, philosophy, and public affairs, with colleagues authored “The Effects of I-502 on Police Clearance Rates: A Time Series Analysis” in Police Quarterly (forthcoming).
Melissa Kowalski, doctorate candidate, Laurie Drapela, associate professor, Mary Stohr, professor, Elizabeth Tollefsbol, doctoral candidate, Youngki Woo, doctoral student, Mei Xiaohan, doctorate student, and Zachary Hamilton, associate professor, and Michael Campagna, former associate professor, criminal justice and criminology, authored “Understanding offender needs over forms of isolation using a repeated measures design” in The Prison Journal (forthcoming).