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| Faculty
Projects and Research |
| Faculty
Projects: |
| Northern
Arizona Justice Project |
Judicial Education Reference, Information, and Technical Assistance
Project (JERITT)
http://jeritt.msu.edu/
|
Law Enforcement Command Institute of the Southwest:
http://www4.nau.edu/criminaljustice/commandinstitute/
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Graffiti Abatement Program in Tucson (GAPIT)
http://www.tucsonaz.gov/dnr/Graffiti_Abatement/graffiti_abatement.html
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| Arizona
Victim Assistance Academy -Contact Dr. Lynn Jones at 928-523-6701 |
| Faculty
Research: |
Alexander
Alvarez
Currently I am working on a book project with my co-author Ronet Bachman
in which we examine various forms of collective and interpersonal
violence. In this project we are trying to highlight some of the common
themes which link different types of individual and group violence.
I continue to study and write about genocide in a number of different
settings and am a co-editor of the new journal Genocide Studies and
Prevention, and also serve as a co-editor of the H-Genocide List Serve
Discussion Network. I also have a number of future projects that I
have tentatively begun. One focuses on examining the role of concentration
camps in the modern era, while the other revolves around Native Peoples
and genocide. |
Cyndi
Banks
I began my career in criminal justice as a probation officer in the
Yukon
Territory of Canada and was tasked to work with a group of Canadian
First Nations people who lived north of the Arctic Circle. I found
that I enjoyed working with indigenous peoples and a few years later
I was able continue this interest when I traveled to Papua New Guinea
to establish the Probation and Parole Service and formulate strategies
for the development of that service for training and designed projects
for juvenile justice diversion. I stayed for 13 years, working in
probation, and parole training officers and then developing a career
as a Research Fellow and Head of PNG Criminology Studies at the PNG
National Research Institute. There I continued my interest in studying
issues related to culture and crime researching the informal and formal
justice systems in PNG and the position of women under the law which
had been the focus for my both my masters and doctoral degrees.
I began my academic career in Alaska and developed an interest in
juvenile
justice, conducting qualitative research in a juvenile facility that
housed
Native Alaskans, which is the subject of a book manuscript I am working
on at the moment. After coming to NAU I researched Native Americans
and the law in the Flagstaff jail and juvenile facility and later
became a consultant researching the juvenile justice system in Bangladesh
where I was the Juvenile Justice and Gender specialist. Recently I
spent 7 months in Iraq where I was exposed to an Islamic legal system.
In terms of law reform, as well as developing the probation and parole
service of Papua New Guinea, my research helped me to design and implement
strategies for juvenile justice reform in Bangladesh and to design
and implement a project for an integrated criminal justice system
in Iraq. This involved producing numerous manuals covering probation
and parole practice and child protection for use by criminal justice
agencies in Papua New Guinea and Bangladesh and in developing rule
of law policies for human rights protection in an integrated justice
system in Iraq.
I have been fortunate enough to travel a great deal as well as having
lived and researched in the U.S. Canada, Papua New Guinea, England,
Bangladesh and Iraq. My research experience has focused on policy
development in the justice sector as well as integrating gender into
the functions and activities of government. My academic work and my
development work both have a strong gender focus. I have authored
a book on criminology in developing countries and have published widely
on criminological issues in those countries as well as on ethics and
punishment in the U.S. My research interests include third world criminology,
juvenile justice, international children’s rights, training
and capacity building in justice systems, gender and crime, especially
in the third world, justice policy development, human rights and justice
ethics. |
Dennis
Catlin
As a former law enforcement officer and FBI Agent, I have been interested
in the ethics of law enforcement and criminal justice personnel. My
research focuses on the personal ethical orientations criminal justice
personnel bring to the job and the impact indoctrination training
and the subculture have on ethical orientation. My studies to date
have looked at both law enforcement and judicial personnel. In law
enforcement the studies have investigated the effect of both recruit
training and subsequent exposure to the police subculture on personal
ethical positions of police officers. These studies have suggested
that over time ethical orientations are impacted by both initial training
and the subculture. My current research looks at whether ethical orientations
are related to ethical decision making as expressed by in series of
hypothetical ethical dilemmas. Similar research with judicial personnel
suggests that judicial personnel who serve in different roles in the
court system have significantly different ethical orientations. |
Michael
Costelloe
My current research interests include: criminological theory; issues
of social control; political economy; public attitudes toward crime,
welfare, and immigration; and policing immigration. Current research
projects include an examination of the influence of crime salience
and economic insecurity on attitudes toward crime, welfare and immigration,
immigration discourse as an example of moral panic, and a study of
the expanding role of local and state police in the enforcement of
federal immigration statutes. |
Luis
Fernandez
My general research interests include the policing of protest, social
movements, and globalization. I am particularly interested in the
ways that the state (through various agencies and practices) controls,
regulates, and pacifies dissent. I spent several years doing ethnographic
work within the anti-corporate globalization movement, documenting
the dynamics between police and protesters. I am currently working
on a book project based on the data I collected. The books analyses
how law enforcement agencies control space to police network-based
mobilizations and movements. More recently, I have started a research
project that analyzes the impact of surveillance, infiltration, and
related intelligence activities on political organization in the United
States. In the future, I hope to develop a research project that examines
the militarization of the U.S./Mexican border, looking at the links
between law enforcement agencies and vigilante groups. In the past,
I have conducted qualitative and quantitative research while working
for the National Council on Crime and Delinquency and for the Morrison
Instituted for Public Policy. |
Lynn
Jones
My research emphasizes the legal profession and public interest law,
social movements and activism, and crime victim services. I am currently
engaged in the study of law and social movements, with particular
emphasis on how cause lawyers negotiate their professional and activist
identities and frame movement strategies. Other current projects include
the study of campus sexual assault, minority crime victims, and barriers
to campus victim services.
Over the last five years, I have worked closely with the Arizona Coalition
for Victim Services to create, administer, and evaluate the Arizona
Victim Assistance Academy. This Academy is a 40-hour training of victim
advocates that aims to standardize and improve service delivery to
the diverse crime victims in Arizona, with particular emphasis on
overcoming the geographic and cultural barriers unique to this state.
Prior to my work with this project in Arizona, I gained additional
experience as co-principal investigator of the Pennsylvania Victim
Assistance Academy. Both projects were initially funded through the
Department of Justice, Office for Victims of Crime. |
Raymond
Michalowski
Most of my academic career has been focused on studying the relationships
between law and justice on the one hand, and political and economic
power on the other. While I have employed research tools ranging from
advanced quantitative analyses to post-modernist modes of inquiry,
in recent years I find my work relying most frequently on ethnographic
and qualitative methods. Right now, two projects are particularly
important to me.
One is a close-grained ethnographic exploration of the nature, goals,
and strategies of social action groups concerned with immigration
along the Arizona-Mexico border. As part of this research I am working
with and/or observing a variety of social movement organizations.
Some of these, such as the Border Action Network, No More Deaths,
Samaritans, Derechos Humanos, Humane Borders and the Florence Project
concerned with protecting and extending the rights of undocumented
migrants from Mexico and nations further south. Others, such as the
Minutemen and the Border Guardians are focused on sealing the U.S.
border against further undocumented migration. My long-term goal is
to both write about and perhaps develop a video documentary on the
social and political struggles taking place over immigration in Southeastern
Arizona.
My other current project involves continuing an inquiry begun in 2003
into the possible violations of international law associated with
the invasion and occupation of Iraq. This work extends the articles
on the illegality of the Iraq war that I published with my colleague
Ron Kramer in Social Justice and the British Journal of Criminology.
I am currently examining the possible the violations of the U.N. Charter
concerning state sovereignty, illegal attempts to convert the Iraq
economy into a neo-liberal market system in violation of the Nuremburg
Charter, and offenses in violations of the Geneva Convention, international
humanitarian law and E.U. laws as they relate to the failure to protect
citizens in a conquered country, unlawful detentions and torture at
places such as Abu Grahib and Camp X-ray at Guantanamo, and the use
of "renditions" to send suspected "enemy combatants"
to be interrogated in countries known to use torture. |
Phoebe
Morgan
I teach courses about women and justice, research methods and justice
policy. Since 1991 my primary focus has regarded the problem of sexual
harassment and I have published extensively on that topic. More recently,
I have published analyses of gun control policy and I am currently
developing a critique of the USA PATRIOT Act. I have experience with
a wide array of research methods and have published the results from
in-depth interviews, content analysis, population surveys and secondary
analysis of public data. More recently I have been developing a methodology
for collecting and analyzing images. I have presented the results
of pilot studies at international conferences and intend to publish
a book about this cutting edge approach to empirical inquiry. |
Marianne
O. Nielsen
I do research in the area of Native Americans and the criminal justice
system, and have expanded this to investigate comparative Indigenous
criminal justice in other countries, mainly Canada, Australia and
New Zealand. I have three books out in the area: Aboriginal Peoples
and Canadian Criminal Justice (edited with Robert A. Silverman), Native
Americans, Crime and Criminal Justice (also edited with Robert A.
Silverman) and Navajo Nation Peacemaking (edited with James W. Zion),
as well as numerous journal articles and book chapters. Because of
this interest, I teach a graduate course on “World Indigenous
Peoples and Justice” and our undergraduate course on “Human
and Cultural Relations in Criminal Justice”. I also do research
on the structure, operation and ideologies of criminal justice organizations.
My other teaching interests are primarily in the area of media and
crime. I teach two undergraduate courses on “Media, Crime and
Justice” and “Hollywood and the Social Construction of
Crime and Justice.” |
Linda
Robyn
Issues of social justice have always been central to my research,
and I have
approached my work through a critical perspective of criminology.
My
interests include State/Corporate Crime, Environmental Justice and
Indigenous
Peoples, American Indians and the Criminal Justice System, and Wrongful
Conviction. Currently, I am working with Dr. Schehr, graduate students,
and
several criminal defense attorneys from the community on the Northern
Arizona
Justice Project. This projects seeks to help those wrongfully convicted
and
imprisoned for crimes which they did not commit. |
Robert
Schehr
My primary research interests center around the study of the causes
of wrongful conviction. This has manifested in: a) scholarly research
addressing wrongful conviction from an international human rights
and transnational perspective; b) research on American Indians and
the death penalty; c) studying national innocence projects as social
movements; and c) juridic discourse analysis of International Court
of Justice and Supreme Court rulings relating to the death penalty.
In addition, I am the Director of the Northern Arizona Justice Project
(NAJP), an actual innocence project that operates out of the Department
of Criminal Justice. The NAJP is comprised of student investigators
who work to investigate real cases where actual innocence has been
alleged. |
Neil
Websdale
My current research work involves writing a book entitled Killing
Them All: Understanding Familicide, due to be published by OUP in
2008/2009. |
Nancy
Wonders
My research and teaching focuses on the relationship between social
inequality, difference, and justice, with an emphasis on the experiences
of underrepresented and vulnerable populations. My current research
project is international and comparative; it explores the relationship
between globalization, (im)migration, inequality, and justice in several
border regions. As part of this work, I have conducted global ethnographic
fieldwork focusing on sex tourism in The Netherlands and, more recently,
on gendered migration to Spain and the growing criminalization of
border crossers throughout the West. I am currently examining shifting
border constructions in the U.S., with a focus on the way that law,
policy, and justice practices reflect and reinforce gender, class,
racial, religious, and other identity differences. I am particularly
interested in the criminal justice and social justice experiences
of recent border crossers. I am also actively involved in local and
regional research on justice practices and policies, in collaboration
with the NAU Social Research Laboratory. I have conducted quantitative
research as an evaluator for courts in Arizona; I have also engaged
in regionally relevant qualitative research, conducting interviews
and focus groups with diverse populations such as domestic violence
survivors, Native America youth, and court personnel. |
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