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Atran, Scot - Professor
Room 520 T | Phone: 212-237-8000 x8666 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email: n/a |
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Barbaret, Rosemary - Associate Professor
Room 520 T | Phone: 212-237-8000 x8666 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email:
n/a |
| Rosemary Barberet is an Associate Professor in the Sociology Department where she currently teaches a variety of courses in the undergraduate major in International Criminal Justice. A native of Connecticut and trained in criminology in the United States (Ph.D., University of Maryland, 1994), she has spent most of her academic career in Europe (Spain and England). [ ... ] more »» |
Barrett, Carla - Substitute Lecturer
Room 520 T | Phone: 212-237-8000 x8666 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email:
cbarrett@jjay.cuny.edu |
| Carla first taught at John Jay in 2004. She has taught Sociology of Violence, Juvenile Delinquency, and Introductory Sociology. Carla received her Masters in Sociology from the New School in 1999 and is currently finishing her Ph.D. in Sociology at the CUNY Graduate Center. Her areas of research and interest are court-involved youth, particularly juveniles tried as adults, urban youth and violence, sociology of punishment, sociology of race and law, critical and cultural criminology and ethnographic methods. more »» |
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Brotherton, David - Chairman & Professor
Room 520.32 T | Phone: 212-237-8694 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email:
dbrotherton@jjay.cuny.edu |
| Dr. Brotherton grew up in the East End of London, England where he worked in various blue-collar jobs while organizing labor and youth. He came to the United States in the early 1980's on an exchange fellowship with the University of California and later worked toward his Ph.D. degree at the University of California, Santa Barbara while teaching public high school in the Mission district of San Francisco.
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Freilich, Joshua - Associate Professor
Room 520.34 T | Phone: 212-237-8668 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email:
jfreilich@jjay.cuny.edu |
| Joshua D. Freilich is the Deputy Executive Officer of the Criminal
Justice Ph.D. program and an Associate Professor in the sociology
department at John Jay College, the City University of New York. Dr.
Freilich’s research focuses on the (1) domestic far-right’s criminal
activities, (2) hate crime, and (3) criminological theory. He is a
lead investigator for the National Consortium for the Study of
Terrorism and Responses to Terrorism (START), a Center of Excellence
of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
Download CV
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Garfield, Gail - Assistant Professor
Room 520 T | Phone: 212-237-8000 x8666 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email: n/a |
| Prof. Gail Garfield was the executive director of the Institute on Violence, Inc. for ten-years. The focus of the Institute’s activities was on African American women’s experiences of violence, and the program areas included: research, policy advocacy, technical support, and outreach and education. Prior to this position, she was the senior policy analyst for human services with the Manhattan Borough President’s Office. She also directed the Public Policy Program at St. Peters College in Jersey City, New Jersey. And, she worked as a senior research analyst with the Community Services Society. As an advocate for poor women and children, Professor Garfield has been active in efforts to reshape social policies and practices in the areas of child welfare, public housing, foster care, drug treatment for women, and violence against women. Prof. Garfield holds a Doctor of Philosophy and a Master Degree of Philosophy in sociology from the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, a Master of Arts Degree from the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Child Psychology from the Institute of Child Development, both from the University of Minnesota. Her current book is entitled, Knowing What We Know: African American Women’s Experiences of Violence and Violation (2005), published by Rutgers University Press.
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Garot, Robert, H. - Assistant Professor
Room 520.33T | Phone: 212-237-8000 x8680 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email: n/a |
I received my Ph.D. from UCLA in 2003. Specializing in the dilemmas of the poor and those who funnel their access to needed good and services, I conducted fieldwork at a federal housing office and an inner-city alternative school. Most recently, I published on gang identity as performance, as an alternative to the control ideology of criminal justice agencies adopted by mainstream academic criminology. I have also shown how young people in an inner-city alternative school respond to, defy, and invoke the dress code as a means of molding identity, and how young people in the inner-city maintain honor while avoiding violence. I explored how housing officials' discretionary decisions are influenced by applicants' anger and tears, and how such workers' biases arise from their suspicions of applicants. From 2006 to 2009, I will examine the psychiatric diagnoses of immigrants in Tuscany and New York. I begin as an Assistant Professor of Sociology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan in Fall, 2006. To download my CV, please visit my website!
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Goodman, Donald - Associate Professor
Room 432 T | Phone: 212-237-8461 | Fax: 212-237-8941 | Email:
donjjc@aol.com |
| Donald Goodman has taught at John Jay for more than thirty years. He is currently in the Thematic Studies Program, teaching and creating new courses. His interests have focused on prisons although in recent years his focus has been on Alternatives to Violence Project, victim/offender mediation and issues of forgiveness.
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