Criminology

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Black Lives Matter in Criminology? Let’s Prove It

Authors Katheryn Russell-Brown
Year 2021
Journal Name Race and Justice
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1 Journal Article

Joshua D. Freilich and Rob T. Guerette eds. (2006) Migration, Culture Conflict, Crime and Terrorism

Authors Davina Bhandar
Year 2008
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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2 Journal Article

Blaming the poor for biodiversity loss: a political economic critique of the study of poaching and wildlife trafficking

Authors MJ Lynch, PB Stretesky, Michael A. Long
Year 2017
Journal Name Journal of Poverty and Social Justice
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3 Journal Article

Perverse criminologies: The closet of Doctor Lombroso

Authors N Groombridge
Year 1999
Journal Name Social & Legal Studies
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4 Journal Article

The "Responsibility to Prevent": An International Crimes Approach to the Prevention of Mass Atrocities

Authors Ruben Reike
Year 2014
Journal Name ETHICS & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS
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5 Journal Article

CRIMINOLOGY STUDY "HATE CRIMES"

Authors Ali Dehbalaei, Ayatollah Parvizifar, Seyyed Sajjad Kazemi, ...
Year 2019
Journal Name HUMANIDADES & INOVACAO
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6 Journal Article

Born radicals? Prevent, positivism, and 'race-thinking'

Authors Katy Pal Sian
Year 2017
Journal Name PALGRAVE COMMUNICATIONS
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8 Journal Article

Criminalising the Other: challenging the race-gang nexus

Authors Patrick Williams
Year 2015
Journal Name Race & Class
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9 Journal Article

Tokenism in Criminology and Criminal Justice Departments: Problems and Solutions

Authors Ojmarrh Mitchell
Year 2020
Journal Name Race and Justice
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10 Journal Article

Commentary on Heidensohn's ‘The deviance of women’: continuity and change over four decades of research on gender, crime and social control

Authors Jody Miller
Year 2010
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Citations (WoS) 1
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11 Journal Article

Manufactured “Mismatch”

Authors Kwan-Lamar Blount-Hill, Victor St John, Victor St. John
Year 2017
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 1
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12 Journal Article

Biosocial criminology and the mismeasure of race

Authors Julien Larregue, Oliver Rollins
Year 2019
Journal Name Ethnic and Racial Studies
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13 Journal Article

Immigration and Crime: Race, Ethnicity, and Violence

Authors David Manuel Hernández
Year 2007
Journal Name Latino Studies
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14 Journal Article

Political eschatology - A theology of antigovernment extremism

Authors White
Year 2001
Journal Name American Behavioral Scientist, 2014, Vol. 58, No. 12, pp. 1614-1633
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15 Journal Article

Comparing cultures, comparing crime: Challenges, prospects and problems for a global criminology

Authors S Karstedt
Year 2001
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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16 Journal Article

Delinquency, dangerousness, ethnicity. A Marxist perspective on criminology

Authors Fabienne Brion
Year 2017
Journal Name AUT AUT
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18 Journal Article

Studies of the New Immigration: The Dangers of Pan-Ethnic Classifications

Authors Stephanie M. DiPietro, RJ BURSIK
Year 2012
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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19 Journal Article

Racial Impact Statements, Knowledge-Based Criminology, and Resisting Color Blindness

Authors Justin M. Smith
Year 2017
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 1
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20 Journal Article

From Race to Reform: Crime and Criminology in Urban America

Authors Jennifer Trost
Year 2010
Journal Name JOURNAL OF URBAN HISTORY
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21 Journal Article

Sociological Criminology and the Mythology of Hispanic Immigration and Crime

Authors John Hagan, Alberto Palloni
Year 1999
Journal Name Social Problems
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22 Journal Article

Perceived threat, blaming attribution, victim ethnicity and punishment

Authors Nir Rozmann, Sophie D. Walsh, D. Walsh Sophie
Year 2018
Journal Name International Journal of Intercultural Relations
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23 Journal Article

Sociological Criminology and the Mythology of Hispanic Immigration and Crime

Authors John Hagan, Alberto Palloni
Year 1999
Journal Name Social Problems
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24 Journal Article

From Warre to tyranny: Lethal conflict and the state

Authors M Cooney
Year 1997
Journal Name American Sociological Review
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25 Journal Article

Kilombismo, Virtual Whiteness, and the Sorcery of Color

Authors Elisa Larkin Nascimento, EL Nascimento
Year 2004
Journal Name Journal of Black Studies
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26 Journal Article

Internalized Racism’s Association With African American Male Youth’s Propensity for Violence

Authors Wesley W. Bryant
Year 2011
Journal Name Journal of Black Studies
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27 Journal Article

Different Approaches to the Study of Mexican Criminals at the End of the Porfiriato

Authors Yussel Arellano Navarrete
Year 2020
Journal Name NOESIS-REVISTA DE CIENCIAS SOCIALES Y HUMANIDADES
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28 Journal Article

The Disappearing of a Migration Category: Migrants Who Sell Sex

Authors Laura Agustín, L Agustin
Year 2006
Journal Name Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
Citations (WoS) 95
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29 Journal Article

Foreigners' Crime and Punishment. Criminalizing Practices in Expulsions of Foreign Offenders.

Principal investigator Jukka Könönen ()
Description
Project description: This research proposal addresses a contested topic, expulsion of foreign offenders. The primary data consists of the analysis of expulsion decisions for Estonian, Romanian, and West African citizens in 2014 and 2018. The comparative research setting enables to examine both racialized practices in the criminalization of migration and and tightening of immigration policies after the refugee crisis in 2015. The use of expulsion decisions as a research data is novel in the international context. Moreover, this research discusses the relation between the criminal law and the immigration law in migration management. The punitive application of the immigration law points to the separation of legal practices for citizens and non-citizens, which has significant implications for the whole judicial system. This research contributes to the international debates by breaking new empirical, methodological, and theoretical grounds in the field of migration studies and criminology. / Hankkeen julkinen kuvaus: Tutkimushanke käsittelee kiistanalaista aihetta, ulkomaalaisten rikosperusteisia käännytyksiä. Hankkeen pääasiallisena aineistona ovat Viron, Romanian ja Länsi-Afrikan kansalaisille tehdyt käännytyspäätökset vuonna 2014 ja 2018. Vertaileva tutkimusasetelma mahdollistaa tarkastella sekä maahanmuuton kriminallisoinnin rodullistettuja ulottuvuuksia että maahanmuuttopolitiikan kiristämistä vuoden 2015 ”pakolaiskriisin” jälkeen. Käytetty aineisto on ainutlaatuinen kansainvälisessä kontekstissa. Tutkimus pureutuu ulkomaalaislain ja rikoslain väliseen yhteyteen maahanmuuton hallinnassa. Ulkomaalaislain rankaiseva soveltaminen viittaa oikeuskäytäntöjen eriytymiseen rikosprosesseissa kansalaisten ja ulkomaalaisten välillä, millä on laajempia merkityksiä koko oikeusjärjestelmän kannalta. Tutkimus tuottaa uutta empiiristä tietoa sekä metodologisesti ja teoreettisesti uudenlaisia lähestymistapoja suhteessa kansainväliseen keskusteluun muuttoliikkeistä ja kriminologiasta.
Year 2019
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30 Project

The Solitary Criminologist

Authors Vaughn J. Crichlow
Year 2017
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 2
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31 Journal Article

Nodes, guardians and signs: Raising barriers to human trafficking in the tourism industry

Authors Alexandros Paraskevas, Maureen Brookes
Year 2018
Journal Name TOURISM MANAGEMENT
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32 Journal Article

The local structures of human mobility in Chicago

Authors James Saxon
Year 2020
Journal Name Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science
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33 Journal Article

Wildlife Crime: A Crime of Hegemonic Masculinity?

Year 2020
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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34 Journal Article

Why Don’t More Black Americans Offend? Testing a Theory of African American Offending’s Ethnic-Racial Socialization Hypothesis

Authors Shytierra Gaston, Elaine Eggleston Doherty
Year 2018
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 3
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35 Journal Article

Predicting Bad Policing: Theorizing Burdensome and Racially Disparate Policing through the Lenses of Social Psychology and Routine Activities

Authors Phillip Atiba Goff, Hilary Rau
Year 2020
Journal Name ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF POLITICAL AND SOCIAL SCIENCE
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36 Journal Article

Nineteenth century criminal geography: WEB Du Bois and the Pennsylvania Prison Society

Authors Deena Varner
Year 2018
Journal Name JOURNAL OF HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
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37 Journal Article

From Warre to tyranny: Lethal conflict and the state

Authors M Cooney
Year 1997
Journal Name American Sociological Review
Citations (WoS) 36
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38 Journal Article

Rehabilitating the Criminality of Immigrants under Section 19 of the Canadian Immigration Act

Authors Matthew G. Yeager
Year 2002
Journal Name International Migration Review
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39 Journal Article

Political determinants of efforts to protect victims of human trafficking

Authors Johanna Schonhofer
Year 2017
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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40 Journal Article

Nina Rodrigues and Fausta Sound and Racialization in Belle Epoque Salvador da Bahia

Authors Dylon Lamar Robbins
Year 2017
Journal Name LUSO-BRAZILIAN REVIEW
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42 Journal Article

Race and Youth Crime

Authors Robert Agnew
Year 2016
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 5
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43 Journal Article

Crime and justice in the context of resource scarcity

Authors JP Crank
Year 2003
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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45 Journal Article

Where do Black lives matter? Race, stigma, and place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin

Authors Jenna M. Loyd, Anne Bonds
Year 2018
Journal Name The Sociological Review
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47 Journal Article

Anti-Muslim Racism on Trial

Authors Marta Kolankiewicz
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48 Book

Can You Hear Me Now? Attorney Perceptions of Interpretation, Technology, and Power in Immigration Court

Authors Maya P Barak
Year 2021
Journal Name Journal on Migration and Human Security
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49 Journal Article

Crime and Enforcement in Immigrant Neighborhoods: Evidence from New York City

Authors Garth Davies, Jefrey Fagan
Year 2012
Journal Name The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science
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50 Journal Article

Social constructions of racial images in introductory criminal justice and criminology textbooks: a content analysis

Authors Seong-Min Park, Jeong L. Kim, Hyoungah Park, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Race Ethnicity and Education
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51 Journal Article

The Russian Far East's illegal timber trade: an organized crime?

Authors Tanya Wyatt
Year 2014
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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52 Journal Article

Structural Disadvantage and Latino Violent Offending

Authors Noah Painter-Davis, Casey T. Harris
Year 2016
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 5
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53 Journal Article

Struggles against subjection. Implications of criminalization of migration for migrants' everyday lives in Europe

Authors Agnieszka Kubal
Year 2014
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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54 Journal Article

Review Essay: The Reassertion of Race, Space, and Punishment's Place in Urban Sociology and Critical Criminology

Authors Thomas E Reifer, Thomas E. Reifer
Year 2013
Journal Name Environment and Planning D: Society and Space
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55 Journal Article

UK Borderscapes: Sites of Enforcement and Resistance

Authors Kahina Le Louvier, Karen Latricia Hough
Year 2024
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56 Book

Blackness in Britain

Authors Lisa Amanda Palmer, Kehinde Andrews
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57 Book

Safety perceptions among African migrants in Guangzhou and Foshan, China

Authors Guangwen Song, Shenjing He, Lin Liu, ...
Year 2020
Journal Name CITIES
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59 Journal Article

Doing Violence, Making Race

Authors Mattias Smångs
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62 Book

Criminal Entanglements.A new ethnographic approach to transnational organised crime.

Description
Linked to terrorism, moral breakdown, and societal decay, Transnational Organised Crime (TOC) has come to embody current global anxieties as a figure of fear and cause of disquiet. Yet despite its central position on the social and political radar, our knowledge of it remains limited and fragmentary. Quantitative analyses may have identified the scale of the problem, but its underlying socio-cultural logic and practices remain under-researched and largely obscure. TOC is on the rise, and we need better insights into how it develops and expands, who engages in it and why, and how it is linked to and embedded in social networks that straddle countries and contexts. CRIMTANG proposes a unique approach to the study of the social infrastructure of contemporary TOC. It develops a research strategy that is ethnographic and transnational in design and so attuned to the human flows and formations of TOC. The project comprises a trans-disciplinary research team of anthropologists, criminologists and political scientists, and builds on their prior experience of the people, regions and languages under study. It explores the illegal and overlapping flows of migrants and drugs from North-West Africa into Europe, following a key trafficking trajectory stretching from Tangiers to Barcelona, Paris and beyond. In so doing, CRIMTANG sheds new light on the actual empirical processes in operation at different points along this trafficking route, whilst simultaneously developing new theoretical and methodological apparatuses for apprehending TOC that can be exported and applied in other regions and contexts. It reimagines the idea of social entanglement and proposes new transnational and collective fieldwork strategies. Finally, it will advance and consolidate the European research environment on TOC by creating a research hub for transnational ethnographic criminology at the University of Copenhagen.
Year 2018
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63 Project

Crime victimization and the implications for individual health and wellbeing: A Sheffield case study

Authors Su-Yin Tan, Robert Haining
Year 2016
Journal Name Social Science & Medicine
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64 Journal Article

MAPS – Migrants And People Smugglers: A Comparative Study of Smuggling Networks in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Central American corridors

Description
To what extent is human smuggling a criminal enterprise driven by solidarity and cooperation? This is the question that my project “MAPS – Migrants And People Smugglers” addresses through a comparative study – of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Central American smuggling corridors. Having almost concluded my research in the Eastern Mediterranean corridor, the project will concentrate almost exclusively on the Central American route in order to identify similarities and differences in the organizational structures of smuggling networks, the smuggler-migrant relationship, and the profile of the facilitators. MAPS seeks to make a contribution to studies on Human Smuggling and Irregular Migration, where there is a keen interest in – yet still insufficient knowledge about – the interaction between migrants and facilitators and where criminological perspectives still dominate the debate. MAPS adopts a critical perspective and departs from the idea that smugglers obey only to a profit making logic. Inviting instead for a more complex understanding of their roles, it argues that human smuggling is embedded within ethnic networks and local economies, which are grounded on deep notions of solidarity and reciprocity. By expanding current knowledge around smuggling and its related policies, the project also aims to provide an empirical platform for policy engagement. In order to achieve its research aims, I will be based at the San Diego State University (SDSU), located at the proximities of the US/Mexican border and renown for being a centre of excellence on migratory trends from Central American. Here, I will be trained in Critical Criminology, Hispanic Studies and Social Network Analysis under the supervision of Prof Sheldon Zhang. Upon returning to my European host institution, the EUI, I will bring my new skills and further improve my policy and dissemination training under the supervision of Prof Triandafyllidou at the Cultural Pluralism Area of the GGP (EUI).
Year 2017
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65 Project

Crime event prediction with dynamic features

Authors Shakila Khan Rumi, Ke Deng, Flora Dilys Salim
Year 2018
Journal Name EPJ Data Science, 2019, Vol. 8, No. 26, OnlineOnly
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66 Journal Article

Illegal and Legal Parrot Trade Shows a Long-Term, Cross-Cultural Preference for the Most Attractive Species Increasing Their Risk of Extinction

Authors Jose L. Tella, F. Hiraldo
Year 2014
Journal Name PLOS ONE
Citations (WoS) 36
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67 Journal Article

Patterns of Drug Use among (ethnic and cultural) Minorities

Principal investigator Tom Delcorte (Coordinartor), Dirk Jacobs (Partner), Ilse Derluyn (Partner), Wouter Vanderplasschen (Partner)
Description
Even though attitudes and practices of ethnic minority groups in Belgium have been extensively studied in the last decade, little is known about the prevalence and nature of their substance use (alcohol and illicit drugs). It therefore remains an under-researched topic, especially in Europe (Bashford et al., 2004). One of the main reasons lies in conceptual and methodological issues that complicate research on ethnicity. These issues, combined with the multidimensional nature of drug use, fear of accusations of racism and discrimination, and a general lack of minority ethnic health and social care workers and researchers, have created an environment where the theme of ethnicity, drug use and related service provision has been neglected. A necessary first step towards a holistic approach for these specific populations is to establish accurate information on the extent of drug use and its possible determinants. This project re-unites a multidisciplinary network (sociology, criminology, special education and social work) that has previously performed the Belspo-funded study on ‘Treatment trajectories of drug users from ethnic minorities’ (ZEMIV-project 2006-2007; Derluyn et al., 2008) - aims to help fill this gap. The general objectives of this research are: • to contribute to a better understanding of the prevalence and nature of drug use among ethnic and cultural minorities (ECM) in Belgium; • to unveil the determining factors behind substance use (illicit drugs and alcohol); • to increase ECM capacity in raising awareness about drug issues within the participants’ own communities; • and to assess the needs of ECM and articulate them with the actors responsible for planning services.
Year 2014
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68 Project

"Subjectivity, Identity and Penal Power: Incarceration in a Global Age"

Description
'This project has two primary, interrelated, goals: to develop new methodological and intellectual tools in understanding the global and transnational reach of penal power and to revitalize the literature on subjectivity and identity in criminology. It is guided by three research questions that it will investigate in four distinct yet inter-related areas: penal theory, the contemporary prison, the immigration detention centre and human rights law. The research questions are: 1) What is the relationship between penal power and national identity? 2) How is that relationship gendered? 3) What do the experiences and views of those subject to penal power tell us about (the limits and nature of) state power in a global age? Taking the prison, the immigration detention centre and the immigration and asylum tribunal as sites where local/national and global power intersect, this project will examine theoretically and empirically the ways in which people experience and negotiate such places, paying particular attention to how matters of identity, especially race, gender, national identification and their intersections, shape the experience, meaning and effects of incarceration. By placing race, gender, and citizenship at the centre of analysis of penal power, this project seeks not only to hold up to scrutiny such core explanatory concepts as legitimacy, culture and power, but also to develop an empirically grounded theoretical framework that will overcome the boundaries between macro and micro-level sociological approaches to incarceration. In so doing the research will significantly reorient how penal power is investigated and understood.'
Year 2012
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69 Project

Mining large-scale human mobility data for long-term crime prediction

Authors Cristina Kadar, Irena Pletikosa
Year 2018
Journal Name EPJ Data Science, 2019, Vol. 8, No. 26, OnlineOnly
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70 Journal Article

Biodiversity and Security: understanding environmental crime, illegal wildlife trade and threat finance.

Description
The core intellectual aim of BIOSEC is to explore whether concerns about biodiversity protection and global security are becoming integrated, and if so, in what ways. It will do so via building new theoretical approaches for political ecology. Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of UNEP recently stated ‘the scale and role of wildlife and forest crime in threat finance calls for much wider policy attention’. The argument that wildlife trafficking constitutes a significant source of ‘threat finance’ takes two forms: first as a lucrative business for organised crime networks in Europe and Asia, and second as a source of finance for militias and terrorist networks, most notably Al Shabaab, Lord’s Resistance Army and Janjaweed. BIOSEC is a four year project designed to lead debates on these emerging challenges. It will build pioneering theoretical approaches and generate new empirical data. BIOSEC takes a fully integrated approach: it will produce a better conceptual understanding of the role of illegal wildlife trade in generating threat finance; it will examine the links between source and end user countries for wildlife products; and it will investigate and analyse the emerging responses of NGOs, government agencies and international organisations to these challenges. BIOSEC goes beyond the ‘state-of-the art’ because biodiversity protection and global security currently inhabit distinctive intellectual ‘silos’; however, they need to be analysed via an interdisciplinary research agenda that cuts across human geography, politics and international relations, criminology and conservation biology. This research is timely because in the last two years, the idea that the illegal wildlife trade constitutes a major security threat has become more prevalent in academic and policy circles, yet it is an area that is under researched and poorly understood. These recent shifts demand urgent conceptual and empirical interrogation.
Year 2016
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72 Project

Integration Processes and Policies in Europe

Authors Rinus Penninx, Blanca Garcés-Mascareñas
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73 Book

Gangs, Migration, and Crime: The Changing Landscape in Europe and the USA

Authors Scott H. Decker, Frank van Gemert, David C. Pyrooz
Year 2009
Journal Name Journal of International Migration and Integration
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75 Journal Article

The British Journal of Sociology in the 1990s: disintegration and disarray?1

Authors Claire Moon
Year 2010
Journal Name The British Journal of Sociology
Citations (WoS) 1
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76 Journal Article

State Crime and Immigration Control in Australia: Jock Serong's On the Java Ridge

Authors Dolores Herrero
Year 2021
Journal Name EUROPEAN LEGACY-TOWARD NEW PARADIGMS
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78 Journal Article

Alternative post-16 transitions: examining the career pathways of young women 'on road

Authors Clare Choak
Year 2021
Journal Name JOURNAL OF YOUTH STUDIES
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79 Journal Article

Racializing Mercy: Capital Punishment and Race in Twentieth-Century England and Wales

Authors Lizzie Seal, Alexa Neale
Year 2020
Journal Name LAW AND HISTORY REVIEW
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80 Journal Article

Clean energy and ethnic cleanliness The discursive, legal and political conditions of the Belo Monte ecocide

Authors Idelber Avelar, Moyses Pinto Neto
Year 2020
Journal Name LUSO-BRAZILIAN REVIEW
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81 Journal Article

Fuck the law: decolonizing nomophilitis with the discourse of love

Authors Biko Agozino, B Agozino
Year 2020
Journal Name Globalizations
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82 Journal Article

The Importance of Immigration With Future Research About School Safety

Authors Anthony A. Peguero, Jennifer M. Bondy
Year 2020
Journal Name Race and Justice
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83 Journal Article

Female offenders of human trafficking and sexual exploitation

Authors Miriam Wijkman, Edward R. Kleemans
Year 2019
Journal Name CRIME LAW AND SOCIAL CHANGE
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84 Journal Article

Penal and Custodial Control of Female Criminality in Spain from a Gender Perspective

Year 2019
Journal Name SOCIAL SCIENCES-BASEL
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85 Journal Article

THE PERSONAL PROTECTION FROM RACIAL DISCRIMINATION IN THE CONDITIONS OF FIGHT AGAINST TERRORISM

Authors Ekaterina A. Khuzina, Gabdrakhman H. Valiev
Year 2018
Journal Name REVISTA SAN GREGORIO
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86 Journal Article

The Broken Syllogism: Legal Effects of Drug Tenure and Consumption in Ecuadorian Internal Regulation

Authors Orly Delgado, Beatriz Muentes
Year 2018
Journal Name ESPACIO ABIERTO
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87 Journal Article

Rap Lyrics as Evidence

Authors Nicholas Stoia, Kevin M. Drakulich, Kyle Adams, ...
Year 2018
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 2
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89 Journal Article

Ethics Review and the Minority Ethnographer

Authors Mike Tapia, Ruben O. Martinez, Rubén O. Martinez
Year 2017
Journal Name Race and Justice
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90 Journal Article

Immigrant Generations and Delinquency

Authors Xin h Jiang, Anthony Peguero, Xin Jiang, ...
Year 2017
Journal Name Race and Justice
Citations (WoS) 2
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91 Journal Article

A Criminological Reading of the Concept of Vulnerability: A Case Study of Brazilian Trafficking Victims

Authors Julie Lima de Perez
Year 2016
Journal Name Social & Legal Studies
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92 Journal Article

NEW 'CRIMMIGRATION' OR THE OLD POLITICAL ECONOMY OF PUNISHMENT? TWO CRIMINOLOGICAL APPROACHES ON THE BORDER CONTROL POLICY IN CHILE

Authors Daniel Quinteros Rojas
Year 2016
Journal Name ASTROLABIO-NUEVA EPOCA
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93 Journal Article

Budgie smuggling or doing bird? Human-animal interactions in carceral space: prison(er) animals as abject and subject

Authors Dominique Moran
Year 2015
Journal Name Social & Cultural Geography
Citations (WoS) 7
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94 Journal Article

Status, emotional displays, and the relationally-based evaluation of criminals and their behavior

Authors Lisa M. Dilks, Thye, Tucker S. McGrimmon, ...
Year 2015
Journal Name Social Science Research
Citations (WoS) 2
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95 Journal Article

Characteristics of Immigrant and Non-Immigrant Patients in a Dual-Diagnosis Psychiatric Ward and Treatment Implications

Authors Sophie D. Walsh, Sophie Walsh, David Blass, ...
Year 2014
Journal Name Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
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96 Journal Article

How to humiliate and shame: a reporter's guide to the power of the mugshot

Authors Paul Lashmar
Year 2014
Journal Name SOCIAL SEMIOTICS
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97 Journal Article

TRACE: TRafficking as A Criminal Enterprise

Description
TRafficking as A Criminal Enterprise (TRACE) aims to support stakeholders in combating and disrupting human trafficking, one of the largest criminal enterprises in the world, by assessing and consolidating information surrounding the perpetrators and the wider trafficking enterprise. TRACE adopts a multi-disciplinary approach: legal, criminological, socio-economical, psychological and law enforcement-oriented, in order to provide a full account of the phenomenon, and build upon on-going European and national projects and activities. It will focus on the activities of the perpetrators by developing an understanding of the structure, social relationships, modus operandi, travel routes and technologies associated with different types of human trafficking (human trafficking for sexual exploitation, labour exploitation, forced criminal activities etc.). Based on the analysis of perpetrators’ behaviour TRACE seeks to be able to better identify who is in danger of being trafficked and furthermore, who is vulnerable to becoming involved in human trafficking (including those who may have been victims themselves). TRACE acknowledges that human trafficking involves a chain of criminal behaviours, activities and processes and will consolidate up-to-date information, good practice and expert opinion to provide stakeholders with an intervention strategy based on policy recommendations for disrupting the trafficking chain. These recommendations will be based on stakeholder consensus reached via interviews, expert workshops, and the final conference. TRACE has designed its dissemination plan, including the development of briefing papers, to disseminate relevant up-to-date information surrounding the different facets of the project to relevant stakeholders in order to support their efforts in disrupting the business of trafficking in human beings.
Year 2014
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98 Project

TRafficking as A Criminal Enterprise

Description
TRafficking as A Criminal Enterprise (TRACE) aims to support stakeholders in combating and disrupting human trafficking, one of the largest criminal enterprises in the world, by assessing and consolidating information surrounding the perpetrators and the wider trafficking enterprise. TRACE adopts a multi-disciplinary approach: legal, criminological, socio-economical, psychological and law enforcement-oriented, in order to provide a full account of the phenomenon, and build upon on-going European and national projects and activities. It will focus on the activities of the perpetrators by developing an understanding of the structure, social relationships, modus operandi, travel routes and technologies associated with different types of human trafficking (human trafficking for sexual exploitation, labour exploitation, forced criminal activities etc.). Based on the analysis of perpetrators’ behaviour TRACE seeks to be able to better identify who is in danger of being trafficked and furthermore, who is vulnerable to becoming involved in human trafficking (including those who may have been victims themselves). TRACE acknowledges that human trafficking involves a chain of criminal behaviours, activities and processes and will consolidate up-to-date information, good practice and expert opinion to provide stakeholders with an intervention strategy based on policy recommendations for disrupting the trafficking chain. These recommendations will be based on stakeholder consensus reached via interviews, expert workshops, and the final conference. TRACE has designed its dissemination plan, including the development of briefing papers, to disseminate relevant up-to-date information surrounding the different facets of the project to relevant stakeholders in order to support their efforts in disrupting the business of trafficking in human beings.
Year 2014
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99 Project

Apartheid, Crime, and Interracial Violence inBlack Boy

Authors Rodwell Makombe
Year 2013
Journal Name Journal of Black Studies
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100 Journal Article
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