Skip to content
Home » Blog » These 13 new crime research studies need you to write about them

These 13 new crime research studies need you to write about them

  • by

(New research for August 2!)

Take a look at these new studies that I’m considering for coverage in True Crime Adjacent (TCA) or Nonfiction Crime Writing (NCW).

I hope something catches your interest and you use it in your own writing. If you do, let me know!

1. Differentiating Insider and Outsider Cyberattacks on Businesses, published in American Journal of Criminal Justice.

2. Community-Based Treatment for Individuals Convicted of Sexual Offenses Using the Integrated Risk Assessment and Treatment System Model Versus Standard Correctional Programming, published in Criminal Justice and Behavior.

3. The dark side of nature conventions: A call to end anthropogenic wildlife destruction, published in Criminology & Criminal Justice.

4. Risk assessment of child-pornography-exclusive offenders, published in Law and Human Behavior.

5. Risk, political security and extra-judicial penality under Xi, published in Theoretical Criminology.

6. Examining the link between social artifacts, solvability factors and case outcomes, published in Policing.

7. Perceptions of police ineffectiveness and street codes by nationality in South Korea: an application of Anderson’s code of the street framework, published in Policing.

8. A Content Analysis of Sex Offender Registries: The Influence of the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA) on Registry Information, published in Criminal Justice Policy Review.

9. Influence of Childhood Psychological Maltreatment on Peer Attachment Among Chinese Adolescents: The Mediation Effects of Emotion Regulation Strategies, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

10. Developmental Considerations in How Defense Attorneys Employ Child Sexual Abuse and Rape Myths When Questioning Alleged Victims of Child Sexual Abuse, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

11. Explaining the Insufficient Relationship between Affective Empathy and Physical Aggression Based on a Double-edged Sword Model, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

12. Perpetrator Perceptions on the Emotions and Motivations Driving Technology-Facilitated Abuse in Relationships: A Story Completion Study, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence.

As always, I hope you’ll find some research to write about yourself. I’d love to read it or watch/listen to it, so please let me know in the comments!

If you found anything that interests you in this post, I’m going to ask for a quick favour:
1. Like this post so that I know I’m reaching someone.
2. Follow me here on Patreon. I share freely available public posts like this all the time.