SBS Criminology & Criminal Justice
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  • Faculty Scholarly Impact

Faculty scholarly impact

Our research initiatives are making an impact on the world

Find a snapshot of the meaningful work that our faculty members engage in. To learn more about the experiences and published work of the faculty members in our department, visit the Criminology and Criminal Justice faculty directory.

Criminology and Criminal Justice Faculty Scholars

Alex Alvarez

Unstable Ground: Climate Change, Conflict, and Genocide (Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 2017)

Christine Arazan

Minority threat, community disadvantage and sentencing.

Journal of Criminological Research, Policy and Practice. (2018)

Elizabeth Bonomo

Lost in the park: Learning to navigate the unpredictability of fieldwork.

In R. Shukla and M. Boeri (Eds.), Inside ethnography: Researchers reflect on the challenges of researching hidden populations (pp. 49-64). Oakland, CA: University of California Press. (2019) (with S. Jacques)

Michael Costelloe

Punitiveness and Perceptions of Criminality: An Examination of Attitudes Toward Immigrant Offenders.

Race and Justice. (2018) (with M. Stenger and C. Arazan)

Brooke de Heer

Sexual Violence on Campus: Climate Surveys and Vulnerable Groups.

Journal of School Violence: Special Issue, 16 (2), 207-221. (2016) (with L.C. Jones)

Luis Fernandez

Abolitionist Approaches to Social Problems.

Social Problems. 66(3): 321–331. (2019)

Rebecca Hubbard

Pedagogy as Empowerment and the Uniqueness of the “Hood” Student.

Contemporary Justice Review Special Issue: Teaching Social Justice: The Classroom as a Space for Social Transformation. Hubbard, Rebecca and Martinson, Kayla (editors). Vol 23:2. (forthcoming)

Lynn Jones

Investigating the self-protective potential of immobility in victims of rape.

Violence and victims, 32(2), 210-229. (2017) (with B.A. de Heer)

Liam J. Leonard

Environmental Criminology: Spatial Analysis and Regional Issues

(Advances in Sustainability and Environmental Justice Book Series Volume 20). (Bingley, UK: Emerald Group Publishing, 2017)

Raymond J. Michalowski Jr.

Complexity below, complexity above: Intra class conflict, immigration imaginaries, and elite alliances in the Arizona–Mexico borderlands.

Theoretical Criminology, Vol. 23, No. 2: 247-265 (2019) (with Fredric Solop)

Phoebe Morgan

Interpersonal Conflict and Academic Success: A Campus Survey with Practical Applications for Academic Ombuds.

The Journal of the International Ombuds Association (2019) (with Heather Foster and Brian Ayres)

Christopher Near

Time with Grandchildren: Subjective Well-Being Among Grandparents Living with Their Grandchildren.

Social Indicators Research: 1-22. (2019) (with Rachel E. Dunifon, Kelly A. Musick, and Christopher E. Near)

Marianne Nielsen

Colonialism is Crime.

(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2019) (with Linda M. Robyn)

Linda Robyn

Colonialism is Crime.

(New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University Press, 2019) (with Marianne O. Nielsen)

Juliette Roddy

Weeds, Pheasants and Wild Dogs: Resituating the Ecological Paradigm in Postindustrial Detroit.

International Journal of Urban and Regional Research 42 (5), 807-827 (2018) (with P. Draus)

Robert Schehr

Standard of Proof, Presumption of Innocence, and Plea Bargaining: How Wrongful Conviction Data Exposes Inadequate Pre-Trial Criminal Procedure.

Cal. W. L. R., 54, 1, 53 (2018).

Emily Schneider

Touring for peace: the role of dual-narrative tours in creating transnational activists.

International Journal of Tourism Cities, Vol. 5 No. 2, pp. 200-218. (2019)

Lisa Tichavsky

“It’s just nice having a real teacher”: Student perceptions of online versus face-to-face instruction.

International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 9(2), 1-18. (2015) (with A.N. Hunt, A. Driscoll, and K. Jicha)

Stephani Williams

The Continuing Significance of Race: Understanding the Complex Relationship between African Americans and the Criminal Justice System.

In the Criminology and Criminal Justice Collectives, Investigating difference (3rdEdition). (Prentice Hall, 2017)

Nancy Wonders

Doing and Undoing Borders: The Multiplication of Citizenship, Citizenship Performances, and Migration as Social Movement.

Theoretical Criminology 23(2): 136-155. (2019) (with Lynn C. Jones)

Criminology & Criminal Justice
Location
Building #65
College of Social and Behavioral Sciences
5 E. McConnell Drive
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Mailing Address
PO Box: 15005
Flagstaff, Arizona 86011
Email
Criminal.Justice@nau.edu
Phone
928-523-9519
Fax
928-523-8011
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