Showing posts with label criminology/criminal justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label criminology/criminal justice. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 13, 2008

This Conference is Right Up Our Alley!

The other day I received in my inbox a call for papers for the following conference:

CRIME AND POPULAR CULTURE:
A Multi-Disciplinary Exploration
An International Academic Conference
October 28-30, 2008

Institute of Justice & International Studies
Department of Criminal Justice
University of Central Missouri

"This academic conference will examine policy, practice, legal, and theoretical issues concerning the interaction between crime and popular culture." Click here for more information.

Now I finally have an outlet to present my (long-gestating and as-yet-unwritten) paper about the criminological implications of Johnny Cash's music! Perhaps we can all submit papers and turn it into a group visit with Velma!

Tuesday, April 29, 2008

Just Nod if You Can Hear Me...

My goodness, the blog's been quiet lately! Perhaps a fun little exercise will entice some of you away from your end-of-semester duties long enough to comment here?

The good folks over at scatterplot also endured a bit of a blogging dry spell recently, broken by belle lettre's post requesting readers' favorite songs about sociology. I have shamelessly stolen borrowed this idea for use here.

So, tell me: Do you have any good songs that illustrate criminological topics/theories/concepts? (Velma hinted about this very topic a few months ago, and I seem to recall that Patch was working on compiling such a list at one time. Is that still true, Patch?)

Me? I'd say that pretty much the entire discography of Johnny Cash is relevant to criminologists. In fact, on my mental list of "things I'd like to write a published article about after I am tenured," the relevance of Johnny Cash's music to the study of crime is at the top of my list. (This paper even has a working title: "The Man in Black: Popular Culture's Foremost Criminologist".) A small sample, by topic:

Murder/Capital Punishment:
"25 minutes to Go"
"Joe Bean"
"Long Black Veil"

Incarceration:
"Folsom Prison Blues"
"I Got Stripes"
"San Quentin"
"Starkville City Jail"

Drug Abuse:
"Cocaine Blues"

Domestic Violence
"Delia's Gone"
(and, of course, "Cocaine Blues")

And those are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head!

OK, so now it's your turn: what's your favorite criminological song? It can be pop, rock, country, hip-hop, Broadway -- whatever springs to mind. (And feel free to link to the lyrics and/or video on YouTube if one is available.) Perhaps if we get enough good suggestions we can create a compilation CD!

P.S. Speaking of music, hopefully everybody got the reference in the post title...

Friday, February 29, 2008

Double-Dip

I have wanted to write about this story for some time now, but have been debating how to proceed as it concerns a rather sensitive subject. I decided that the best course of action was to use ridiculous examples in place of real identifiers so that the parties involved would stay completely anonymous. As the old saying goes, the names are made up but the story is real...

Recently I received a manuscript to review for the Journal of Ice Cream. The paper examined the influence of flavor name and percent chocolate content on tasters’ Peace Pop flavor preferences. I only glanced briefly at the manuscript as I set it in my “to do” pile, but not before noticing that its title was nearly identical to that of another article on Peace Pop flavor preferences published a few years ago in Ben & Jerry’s Quarterly. The BJQ article – which, as fate would have it, I had read not more than two weeks before – was written by several co-authors, the most senior of whom is an extremely well known and highly respected scoopologist. The similarity of the titles made me wonder if both articles were written by the same authors, but I decided that it also could have been a coincidence. (I don’t know about the rest of you, but I sometimes struggle to create titles for my manuscripts that are not repetitive of existing article titles.) Anyway, I didn’t think much more about it until I sat down to read the manuscript a short time later.

The first thing I did was flip to the data and methods section to look at the dataset that was used. I recognized it from the BJQ article, so I knew that the same authors had written the JIC manuscript I was reviewing. (I’d like to note here that I do not make a habit of trying to snoop out the authors of the manuscripts I review. However, considering that the field of scoopology is relatively small compared to other disciplines like foodology and drinkonomics, it is often possible to identify the author(s) of a “blind” manuscript, particularly if the same dataset is used in multiple articles.) Not thinking much of the discovery, I flipped back to the first page and began to read.

After reading the first two paragraphs I thought to myself, “Hmm. That sounds a lot like the introduction of the BJQ article.” But, as with titles, I sometimes find it difficult to craft introductions to my manuscripts that are not derivative of things I’ve already written, so I wasn’t terribly concerned that the authors had borrowed from their earlier work. Then I kept reading. “This really, really sounds a lot like the BJQ article,” I thought. I decided that I was going to comment in my review that the authors had borrowed too heavily from their previous article, and I wanted to identify which text in the JIC manuscript had been taken directly from the BJQ article. So, I located my copy of the BJQ article, put it side by side with the JIC manuscript, and began highlighting the copied passages. Would you believe that I did not stop highlighting once in nine pages? Not once! In nine pages!! Every subject heading, every sentence – the entire front end from the introduction right up to the data and methods section was taken verbatim from the BJQ article. The only difference was that an additional paragraph of text had been inserted to justify the inclusion of percent chocolate content, a variable the BJQ article had not examined.

I was in total disbelief. The more I read, the more I highlighted. The analysis was identical to that of the published article, save for the addition of percent chocolate content, so the results section was nearly identical as well. Same goes for the discussion and conclusion – the entire last two pages of text were lifted directly from the BJQ article! By the time I finished reading the manuscript I was speechless. I would estimate that, conservatively, 85% of the JIC manuscript was indistinguishable from the authors’ published BJQ article.

After the shock wore off, I decided that I needed to contact the JIC editor directly. Then I remembered that ShockProf had had a similar experience when she reviewed a manuscript for Scoops some years back, so I called her to ask her what she had done. She told me that she had also contacted the editor directly, and agreed with my decision. So, I e-mailed the editor and explained that I had some serious concerns about the manuscript I’d been asked to review, and asked if we could speak by phone. I also attached an electronic copy of the BJQ article, explaining that it would be of interest when we spoke, which ended up being the very next day.

Crazy, huh? I have a couple of thoughts about the matter, then I’d be interested to hear others' thoughts. First, I surmised from reading both papers that the data belonged to the senior author, but that the bulk of the analysis and writing was completed by the other co-authors. Given the exceptionally high regard in which the senior author is held by fellow scoopologists, I imagine that the creation and submission of the second manuscript to JIC was done without this person's knowledge or consent. There is simply no way a scholar of this person's caliber would ever stand for such shoddy, irresponsible, and unprofessional work. Suffice it to say that I would not want to be in the co-authors' position when the journal editor contacts them. I just do not understand how someone could jeopardize a colleague's reputation like that.

Second, I pondered the scenario in which I (or the other reviewers) did not catch this, and the manuscript was published in JIC. I imagine it would be a copyright violation of the BJQ article – anyone know what would have happened, either to the Journal of Ice Cream or to the authors? I suppose it’s probably a good thing that this was discovered before the manuscript ever had a chance to be published, both for the authors and for the journal.

Finally, I am just stunned at the laziness, carelessness, and foolishness involved here. The Trailing Spouse suggested that perhaps the co-author(s) didn't know that such behavior was improper; I assured him that you can’t leave a Ph.D. program without knowing that ripping off published work – even if it’s your own – is unethical, dishonest, and just plain wrong.

So, what do you think? What would you have done in my situation? Has this ever happened to you as a reviewer? Have you ever come across published articles by the same author(s) that you thought were a bit too close for comfort? And, most importantly, would you also ditch criminology for a career in scoopology quicker than you can say "Cherry Garcia"?

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Tragedy at Northern Illinois University

In a tragic scenario eerily reminiscent of the mass shooting at Virginia Tech University last April, a gunman earlier today opened fire at Northern Illinois University, leaving 18 people injured and 5 people -- including the gunman -- dead.

This is such a profound loss for a university community to sustain, and will no doubt rekindle the conversations begun after the Virginia Tech massacre about campus security measures and how (or whether) universities can protect students and faculty from such horrific acts of violence.

I will post more about this story as information becomes available. In the meantime -- as with all of you, I'm sure -- my thoughts and prayers are with the students, faculty, and staff of NIU.

UPDATE: Turns out the tragedy at NIU hits particularly close to home for those of us in criminology/criminal justice. The man responsible for the shooting deaths at NIU is Steven Kazmierczak, who had studied corrections as a sociology graduate student at NIU. (Though the Chicago Tribune reports that at the time of the shootings Kazmierczak was a graduate student at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, having presumably left NIU.) He co-authored a reaction essay in the February 2006 issue of Criminology & Public Policy entitled, "Self-injury in correctional settings: "Pathology" of prisons or of prisoners?". His author biography accompanying that article reads:
Steve Kazmierczak is beginning graduate work at Northern Illinois University. In addition to his interests in corrections, political violence, and peace and social justice, he is co-authoring a manuscript on the role of religion in the formation ofearly prisons in the United States with Jim Thomas and Josh Stone. He is also develops [sic] content for online education and is an executive board member of the NIU student chapter of the American Correctional Association.
Finally, an additional victim has died, bringing the total number of deaths to 6, including Kazmierczak.

Thursday, January 10, 2008

Crime & Justice Images in Advertising

I've been thinking lately about advertisers' use of crime-and-justice images to sell their products.

It all started when I saw this Swiffer television commercial the other day:



Certainly, the concept's not very original (note the heavy reliance upon Hollywood courtroom cliches: the suspenseful music, the judge's slight head cock to indicate her intent listening, the exaggerated "Objection!" and "Please point to the defendant!" phrases). But I was intrigued by the following sentencing pun: "Put your broom away for life". Witty, eh?

This made me think about another commercial from years ago for a bar soap alternative (exactly which product it was I can't remember for the life of me...Neutrogena? Noxema?) that made a similar pun: "Get out from behind bars".

All of this made me contemplate how entrenched the criminal justice system is in our public consciousness, to the point where images and phrases associated with it are used in everyday advertising. I was thinking that other examples of commercials using these types of crime-and-justice images might be useful for demonstrating to students how important an institution the criminal justice system is in our society. Anybody else have other examples? All I could come up with was the Hamburglar (he of the inmate stripes and burglar mask, natch).

Monday, January 7, 2008

You Do What?

At swimming practice -

A: Bummer about the highway shutting down for a year. Traffic is going to be a nightmare on Monday.

V: I plan on working from home one day a week, and my university isn't on this highway.

A: What department are you in?

V: Criminology.

A: So you work with the police on solving crimes? Must be gross at times.

V: Not so much, I do work with the PD, but I help with mapping and policy analyses. My emphasis is on corrections. (I didn't even get into my new study on sex offenders - that really freaked people out at Christmas)

A: Wow! I would have never guessed that. You look so nice! How did you get interested in prisons?

V: Debate topic in high school.

A: (Silence). Wow!

A colleague often argues that we are stigmatized by our subject. I didn't feel this sentiment in this conversation, but I have had awkward exchanges in the past. Many even argue that crim often gets looked down on in soc departments because our analyses (at least some parts) are more applied. Anyone have similar experiences?