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9 new crime research studies for November 10

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1. An Evaluation of a Tailored Peer Mediation Program for Incarcerated Women in Italy, published in Crime & Delinquency.

2. How can we help law enforcement agencies learn? A look at CALEA police accreditation, published in Policing: An International Journal.

3. Sentencing young adults with juvenile sanctions in The Netherlands: increasing risk or no differences on the chance of recidivism, published in Journal of Experimental Criminology.

4. Parole as a boxing match: Lifers, prosecution, and the adversarial making of parole hearings, published in Punishment & Society.

5. Reforming the Police: Examining the Effect of Message Framing on Police Reform Policy Preferences, published in Criminal Justice Policy Review.

6. Shame and Emotion Dysregulation as Pathways to Posttraumatic Stress Symptoms Among Women With a History of Interpersonal Trauma, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

7. The Impact of the Defense Attorney on Plea Decision-Making: An Experimental Analysis, published in Criminal Justice and Behavior.

8. Mixed Signals: The Effect of Employment Training on Employment Outcomes for Previously Incarcerated Individuals, published in International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology.

9. Is it Black and White? Testing racial framing effects of public reactions to newspaper vignettes of fatal officer-involved shootings, published in Journal of Experimental Criminology.

I will also share five of these articles in Your First Five in Understanding Crime. (What’s ‘Your First Five’?)


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