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Research by our MSCJ Faculty

Our graduate faculty in Criminal Justice are renowned researchers. Their areas of interest include victimology, police organizations, corrections, juvenile justice, criminal law, crime prevention, and more. Following is a very small selection of their publications.

Michael E. Buerger and Amy Farrell. The Evidence of Racial Profiling: Interpreting Documented and Unofficial Sources. Police Quarterly 2002 5: 272-305.

Michael E. Buerger. A Tale of Two Targets: Limitations of Community Anticrime Actions. Crime & Delinquency 1994; 3:411-36.

Michael E. Buerger and Lorraine Green Mazerolle. Third-party policing: A theoretical analysis of an emerging trend. Justice Quarterly 1998 2:301-327.

Melissa W. Burek. Now Serving Part Two Crimes: Testing the Relationship Between Welfare Spending and Property Crimes. Criminal Justice Policy Review, Sep 2005; 16:360-84.

Christopher C. Dunn (Ed.). Race and Juvenile Justice in Ohio. Bowling Green:
Bowling Green State University.

Wu, Bohsiu and Christopher C. Dunn. 1993 Socioeconomic and community effects, pp. 76-87. In Christopher C. Dunn (Ed.), Race and Juvenile Justice in Ohio. Bowling Green: Bowling Green State University.

Steven P. Lab. Crime Prevention: Approaches, Practices and Evaluations. 2004. Anderson Publishing.

Steven P. Lab. Juvenile Justice: An Introduction. 2006. Anderson Publishing.

Steven P. Lab and William G. Doerner. Victimology. 2005. LexisNexis.

Georgia Smith and Steven P. Lab. Urban and Rural Attitudes toward Participating in an Auxiliary Policing Crime Prevention Program.





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