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25 J. Crime & Just. v (2002)

handle is hein.journals/jlcmadjc25 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Journal of Crime & Justice  v


                    ABOUT THE AUTHORS

Michael  J. Gaffney is Assistant Director of the Division of Governmental
Studies and Services at Washington State University. Mr. Gaffney received
a BA  degree in Political Science and Economics and a Juris Doctor degree
from the University of Idaho, served a tour of duty in the US Air Force as
Assistant Staff Judge Advocate, and is currently pursuing a Ph.D in Political
Science at WSU. His research interests include social capital, volunteerism,
crime prevention, and alternative dispute resolution.

Chris Gibson  is a doctoral student in the Department of Criminal Justice at
the University of Nebraska at Omaha. He has published articles testing the
general theory of self-control as well as the biosocial foundations of crimi-
nal behavior. He has recently published articles in Justice Quarterly, Psy-
chological Reports, Journal of Crime and Justice, Journal of Criminal Jus-
tice, and the International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative
Criminology. His current interests include quantitative methods and statis-
tics, developmental criminology, and policing.

Andy  Hochstetler is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology
at Iowa State University. Currently, he is researching varying incarceration
experiences and potential effects of incarceration experiences on parolees'
well-being.

Darrell D. Irwin  is an Assistant Professor in Criminal Justice at the Uni-
versity of North Carolina at Wilmington. His current research investigates
the linkage between drug use and gun violence. He has published on youth
subcultures, drug abuse and faith-based programs.

Kent  R. Kerley is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at
Mississippi State University. His current research interests include crime
and  the life course, policing, homicide, and white-collar crime. His most
recent work appears in Justice Quarterly, Police Quarterly, and in Pontell
and Shichor's Contemporary  Issues in Criminal Justice: Essays in Honor of
Gilbert Geis.

Nicholas  P. Lovrich has been the Claudius O. and Mary W. Johnson  Dis-
tinguished Professor of Political Science since 1998, and has served as the
Director, Division of Governmental  Studies and Services at Washington

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