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30 Crim. Just. Stud. 1 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/cjscj30 and id is 1 raw text is: CRIMINAL JUSTICE STUDIES, 2017
VOL. 30, NO. 1, 1-16                                                        ledge
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1478601X.2016.1269325                        Taylor & Francis Group
College education, major, or criminology classes? An
examination of what drives students' level of punitiveness
Rebecca Ridener and Sarah Kuehn
Criminology & Security Studies, Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania, Slippery Rock, PA, USA
ABSTRACT                                                       ARTICLE HISTORY
This study examines the level of punitiveness of criminology   Received 1 July2016
and criminal justice (CRIM) majors and non-majors. In particular,  Accepted 4 December 2016
undergraduate students from a mid-western university situated in  KEYWORDS
a rural area were surveyed to determine if college education, major,  Punitiveness; college
or exposure to CRIM classes impacts their punitive attitudes towards  students; criminology;
offenders. Regression analyses suggest that it is not the number of  criminal justice;
CRIM classes or the liberalization effect of college but the major that  liberalization; attitudes
best predicts the level of punitiveness. Results also indicate that
predictors of punitiveness differ between CRIM majors and non-CRIM
majors. Implications of these findings are discussed.
Introduction
Prior research has examined if college education has a liberalization effect on students'
attitudes (Eskridge, 1999; Funk & Willits, 1987). It is argued that college liberalizes students
by exposing them to different opinions and lifestyles both within and outside of the class-
room (Fabianic, 1979). The focus of this study is to examine the liberalization effect in terms
of students'punitive attitudes towards offenders. Specifically, this study seeks to determine
if this effect is achieved through class level, major, or exposure to criminology and criminal
justice (CRIM) classes. While previous studies have examined the level of punitiveness for
CRIM majors vs. non-CRIM majors, this study takes a novel approach by also including the
number of CRIM classes taken by all students regardless of their academic field of study.This
is important because previous studies are based on the assumption that CRIM majors have
taken several CRIM classes and definitely more classes on the subject than non-CRIM majors.
This assumption might not be accurate because students can declare their major in CRIM
without having taken any classes in the subject, switch from CRIM to a different major after
taking several CRIM classes, or be a non-major who takes liberal studies classes in CRIM.
Therefore, the consideration of both major and CRIM classes in the analyses helps specify if
it is taking CRIM classes and learning about crime and criminal justice issues or being a CRIM
major that influences students'level of punitiveness. The latter would imply that criminology
majors, regardless of how many CRIM classes they have taken, already come into this major
with set attitudes, which are different from students in other fields of study.
CONTACT Rebecca Ridener 0 rebecca.ridener@sru.edu
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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