Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The American Journal of Criminal Justice is a peer-reviewed journal offering extensive research on diverse criminal justice topics and issues. Provides coverage of the criminal justice process, including the formal and informal interplay between system components.
The Only Thing Constant is Change: Temporal Analyses of Racial/Ethnic Sentencing Disparities. The American Journal of Criminal Justice is a peer-reviewed journal offering extensive research on diverse criminal justice topics and issues.
Cybercrime. Issue 5 October 2021. Issue 4 August 2021. AJCJ Presidential. Issue 3 June 2021. Issue 2 April 2021. Issue 1 February 2021. Research on Sexual Violence in the #MeToo Era: Prevention and Innovative Methodologies.
The American Journal of Criminal Justice publishes original articles that utilize a broad range of methodologies and perspectives when examining crime, law, and criminal justice processing.
American Journal of Criminal Justice is a hybrid open access journal. Once the article is accepted for publication, authors will have the option to choose how their article is published: Traditional publishing model – published articles are made available to institutions and individuals who subscribe to American Journal of Criminal Justice or ...
Explore all of the Open Access articles published in the American Journal of Criminal Justice here. Updates and news from American Journal of Criminal Justice.
Exact requirements may vary depending on the journal; please refer to the journal’s Instructions for Authors. Checklists are available for a number of study designs, including: Randomised trials (CONSORT) and Study protocols (SPIRIT)
American Journal of Criminal Justice - The COVID-19 pandemic created social upheaval and altered norms for all members of society, but its effects on first responders have been particularly...
Using a sample of 152 estimates drawn from 79 papers, we conducted a meta-analysis to estimate the effect of four forms of prison education (adult basic education, secondary, vocational, and college). We find that prison education decreases recidivism and increases post-release employment and wages.
After observing crime trends and justice system challenges, we suggest how the pandemic presents opportunities for review of various criminal justice, especially incarceration, policies. System change is a recurring theme across this special issue of the American Journal of Criminal Justice that features twenty additional contributions from a ...