SAGE Criminology (Criminology)

Carrie Baker discusses her most recent article, Challenging Narratives of the Anti-Rape Movement's Decline.

Direct download: VAW_Carrie_Baker.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 1:26pm EDT

Stacy and John discuss their recent article, "Assessing the Impact of a Focused Deterrence Strategy to Combat Intimate Partner Domestic Violence."

Direct download: VAW_Stacy_and_John.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 7:24pm EDT

Ethan Czuy Levine discusses his most recent article, "Sexual Scripts and Criminal Statutes: Gender Restrictions, Spousal Allowances, and Victim Accountability After Rape Law Reform."

Direct download: VAW_Ethan.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 4:38pm EDT

In this podcast, Probation Journal editor Nicola Carr interviews Sarah Anderson, author of the 2016 Best Paper Prize winning article ‘The Value of Bearing Witness to Desistance’.

Direct download: Sarah_Anderson_Best_Paper_Prize_Podcast.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 5:41am EDT

Author Jennifer Carlson discusses her article, "The Equalizer? Crime, Vulnerability, and Gender in Pro-Gun Discourse" which was published in the January 2014 issue of Feminist Criminology and was awarded the journal's 2014 Best Article of the Year Award.

Abstract:
Alongside literature on how crime and crime control reproduce racial inequality, less attention has been paid to how the social construction of crime reproduces masculine priviledge. To address this gap, I examine 71 interviews with gun carriers. While gun carries actively promote guns to women, they tend to assume a masculine perspective on crime by emphasizing fast, warlike violence perpetrated by strangers - the kinds of crime men, as opposed to women, are likely to face. Extending theories of vulnerability to gun politics, I argue that the social construction of crime is a key vehicle through which gender is reproduced.

Read the article here.

Direct download: FC_Carlson.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 6:17pm EDT

Paul Knepper, Editor of the European Journal of Criminology, talks to Daniel Seddig, winner of the European Society of Criminology’s Young Criminologist Award

 

Link to the associated article:
http://euc.sagepub.com/content/11/3/319.full.pdf+html

Direct download: Daniel_Seddig.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 3:38am EDT

Marcelo Aebi introduces the Special Issue on Comparative Criminology

 

Link to the associated article:
http://euc.sagepub.com/content/12/4/381.full.pdf+html

Direct download: Susanne_Karstedt_full.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 3:10am EDT

Jan Van Dijk introduces his paper: ‘The case for survey-based comparative measures of crime’

 

Link to the associated article:
http://euc.sagepub.com/content/12/4/437.full.pdf+html

Direct download: Jan_Van_Dijk_final.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 1:50am EDT

Marcelo Aebi introduces the Special Issue on Comparative Criminology

 

Link to the associated article:
http://euc.sagepub.com/content/12/4/381.full.pdf+html

Direct download: marcelofull.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 12:07am EDT

Art Lurigio and Hank Steadman discuss the upcoming special issue for The Prison Journal, published January 2016. Art guest edited the issue and Hank is one of the featured authors.

tpj.sagepub.com

Direct download: TPJ_Lurigio_Steadman.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 2:16pm EDT

Author Andrea Nichols discusses her article, "Meaning-Making and Domestic Violence Victim Advocacy: An Examination of Feminist Identities, Ideologies, and Practices" which was published in the July 2013 issue of Feminist Criminology and was awarded the journal's 2013 Best Article of the Year Award. Abstract: Early domestic violence victim advocacy included survivor-defined, intersectional, and social change practices rooted in feminism. Yet, research specifically examining the ways that advocates identify with and make meaning of feminism, and the relationship of such meanings to advocates’ practices, is limited. Drawing from interviews with 26 domestic violence victim advocates, the interaction between feminist identity, ideology, and practices is examined. Findings indicated that advocates with feminist identities and ideologies held survivor-defined, social change, and intersectional approaches to advocacy. Nonfeminist advocates practiced survivor-defined advocacy, but did not maintain social change or intersectional practices. Implications for advocacy are provided.

Read the article here.

Direct download: FC_Andrea_Nichols.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 6:54pm EDT

Author Alessandra González discusses her recent article in Feminist Criminology, “How Women Engage Homegrown Terrorism.” The article, co-authored by Joshua Freilich and Steven Chermak, appears in the special November issue of the journal, celebrating the 30th anniversary of the American Society of Criminology’s Division on Women and Crime.

AbstractU.S. Extremist Crime Database (ECDB) Study data of homicides by far-right extremists and arsons and bombings by environmental and animal rights extremists suggest that compared with men, relationships are catalysts for women’s involvement in domestic terrorism; recruitment and opportunity differ by ideology and are not always effective in victimizing their intended hate group. We suggest an inter-disciplinary approach that considers criminological principles of strain theory along with sociological emphasis on gendered social networks and the strength of weak ties.

 

The article is currently available OnlineFirst.

For more information on the DWC’s 30th Anniversary, read about their Thirty Dollars for Thirty Years campaign here. Or, check out the DWC 30th Anniversary Issue: Growth & Diversity in Feminist Criminology, which will soon be available here.

 

Posted September 2014.

Direct download: FC_Alessandra_Gonzalez.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 11:58am EDT

Dr. James Cantor, your host and Editor of Sexual Absue: A Journal of Research and Treatment (SAJRT), interviews Dr. Martin Lalumière and Dr. Qazi Rahman in this new SAJRT podcast on the study of paraphilic interests.

His first guest, Dr. Lalumière, is senior author of a new SAJRT study coauthored by Samantha Dawson and Brittany Bannerman, entitled, "Paraphilic Interests: An Examination of Sex Differences in a Nonclinical Sample." 

 

(Available OnlineFirst, here.)

Later in the podcast, Dr. Cantor is joined by Dr. Rahman, senior lecturer in the Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College London and a lead researcher in development of sexual interests, including paraphilia and notably, the biological basis of sexual orientation.

 

Posted August 28, 2014.

Direct download: SAJRT_MartinQazi_edit.mp3
Category:Criminology -- posted at: 2:23pm EDT

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