Criminal Justice and Criminology
adrianaMany recent and pending publications by criminal justice and criminology faculty, graduate students, and alumni can be found in the department newsletter.
Many recent and pending publications by criminal justice and criminology faculty, graduate students, and alumni can be found in the department newsletter.
A listing of many recent publications by anthropology faculty is available in the department newsletter.
Amelie Pedneault, assistant professor, criminal justice and criminology, presented “Criminal Failure: A Comparison between Completed Sexual Assault and Attempted Sexual Assault” in March 2021 at the Centre international de criminologie comparée (International center for comparative criminology) conference.
John Streamas, associate professor, languages, cultures, and race, presented “Steering Around the Transpacific in the Contemporary American Nuclear Imaginary” at the Association for Asian American Studies’ annual conference online.
Streamas also presented “Displacement and the Japanese American Experience”: a reading and conversation with graphic novelist Kiku Hughes for the Get Lit! literary festival of Eastern Washington University.
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.
Vilma Navarro-Daniels, professor, languages, cultures, and race, presented “’We will survive as two Robinsons’: The loss of sociopolitical referents as the dissolution of one’s own subjectivity in Ignacio Martínez de Pisón’s ‘La muerte mientras tanto’ (‘Death meanwhile’)” at the 27th International Conference on Literature and Hispanic Studies organized by Lock Haven University, Lock Haven, Pennsylvania.
Navarro-Daniels also coauthored En la Elocuencia del Silencio (In the Eloquence of Silence); Critical Edition of the Poetry of Marta Ortiz Lorca (Valparaíso University Press) through a grant from the Ministry of Cultures, Arts and Heritage, Government of Chile.
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.
Emmiyan Ferro, doctoral student, languages, cultures, and race, presented “Latinx barbershop masculinities” in an online presentation hosted by the University of Washington School of Interdisciplinary Arts & Sciences.
Joe Campbell, professor, politics, philosophy, and public affairs, coauthored and presented “Libet Experiments & Free Will Denialism” at the 2020 Science of Consciousness Conference sponsored by the Center for Consciousness Studies at the University of Arizona. Campbell also edited a set of papers that were published in Grazer Philosophische Studien.
Avantika Bawa, associate professor, fine arts, WSU Vancouver, exhibited her collection of drawings and wall works titled ICE. ICE, at THE END in Atlanta, Georgia. Bawa also presented a visual arts talk online with fellow Hallie Ford fellows at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art in Eugene, Oregon.