On the job market

 

Rodger Benefiel

 

Rodger is a first-year doctoral student in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University. He earned his undergraduate degree in Correctional Administration and Management from Bellevue University in 2006 and his Masters of Science in Criminal Justice Administration from Saint Leo University in 2008. Rodger has over twenty years' experience in law enforcement, including eighteen years' service with the Federal Bureau of Prisons. He is currently the Chief Correctional Supervisor at the Federal Correctional Institution in Phoenix, Arizona. Rodger's research interests include line-level leadership, organizational culture, and labor-management relations.

 

 

Lisa Dario

 

Lisa Dario is a fourth year doctoral student in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University. She is also the managing editor of Justice Quarterly. Her research focuses on policing, crime and place, and experimental methodology. She has taught several courses (both undergraduate and graduate level), including delinquency, ethics, and applied data analysis. Lisa's work has been published in the Journal of Experimental Criminology, Crime & Delinquency, and the Journal of Crime and Justice.

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Janne Gaub

 

Janne Gaub is a doctoral candidate in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at ASU. After earning her bachelor of science in criminal justice administration from the University of Arizona, she came to ASU to earn her master of arts in criminal justice. She is a former Spirit of Service Scholar with the College of Public Programs and Graduate College Fellow. Her research interests center on gender, with a particular emphasis on policing. In particular, she is interested in how gender affects our views of crime and our interpretation of crime statistics and trends. Her dissertation looks at how the predictors of police misconduct vary by sex. She has taught courses at both the graduate and undergraduate levels in discretionary justice, law and social control, crime control policies, and introductory courses in criminal justice and corrections.

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Richard Moule Jr.

 

Richard is a fourth year doctoral student in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, and is currently is working as a research assistant under Dr. Scott Decker. His research interests include gangs and other deviant networks, criminological theory, and the intersection of technology and crime. His dissertation explores the negative influence of adolescent gang membership on a number of social, economic, and health outcomes among a sample of juvenile delinquents from the 1930s.

Richard received his M.S. in Criminology and Criminal Justice (2011) from Arizona State University and his B.S. in Criminology and Justice Studies (2009) at The College of New Jersey.

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Jillian Turanovic

 

Jillian Turanovic joined the doctoral program in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University in 2011. She received her M.S. in Criminology and Criminal Justice (2011) from Arizona State University and her B.A. in Psychology and Sociology (2009) from Grant MacEwan University in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. She has taught undergraduate courses at ASU including "Advanced Criminological Theory," “Criminal Justice Crime Control,” and “Women, Crime, and Justice.” Her research interests include criminological theory, victimization and offending, and the collateral consequences of incarceration. Her recent work is published in Criminology and the Journal of Quantitative Criminology

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Samuel Vickovic

 

Sam is a first year doctoral student in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Arizona State University.  He earned his Bachelor of Arts degree in Criminology, Law and Society from the University of California, Irvine and his Master of Science from California State University, Long Beach.  His current research interests include drug use and drug policy especially concerning marijuana, and the intersection of criminal justice, media, and popular culture.

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