Let’s Keep ASC Green!

recyclingRecycling is not a crime!  Let’s keep the ASC meeting this year “green.”

Help the environment and reduce waste by:

Recycling Paper Products and ASC Programs

  • Place your unwanted paper products in designated recycling bins conveniently located next to the registration tables.

Returning Your Unwanted ASC Bag

  • Don’t need yet another bag from ASC?  Consider giving the bag back to ASC to be recycled by placing it in the bins next to the registration tables.

Returning Your Unwanted ASC Name Badge Holder

  • Bring along your old ASC name tag from previous years and return the new one to be used for other attendees.

 

Feminist Criminology Theory in Action Workshop

fem_theoryThis year marks the 17th annual Feminist Theory in Action Workshop! Our first gathering was in 1998, and was facilitated by our brilliant colleagues: Nancy Wonders and Mona Danner. A few years ago, Natalie Sokolff and Kim Cook picked up the torch. It’s been a wonderful part of the ASC and we are proud to continue this tradition… Sadly, Natalie Sokoloff will not able to join us this year.

Typically we introduce ourselves and our areas of interest to each other, and then the conversation takes off from there. We share important research findings, exploration of gendered issues occurring in the world and, of course, ideas for activism within the frameworks of feminist theory and practice. It really enhances the rest of the conference week because we meet people we’ve never met before, and then can continue to see them and chat throughout the conference.

Below is the meeting time/place for the annual workshop. Hope you can make it! We always have a group dinner afterwards, so if you can, please join in for dinner as well. Details for dinner will be decided at the workshop. Please come!

Division on Women and Crime Feminist Criminology Theory in Action Workshop                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                        Tuesday, Nov 18, 4:00 to 7:00pm, Marriott, Salon 11, Lower B2 Level

Journal Manuscript Reviewer Training Workshop

journalsJournal Manuscript Reviewer Training Workshop sponsored by the Division on Women and Crime, Thu, Nov 20, 2:00 to 4:50pm, Marriott, Foothill D, 2nd Floor

Claire Renzetti (Editor of Violence Against Women) and Rosemary Barberet (Editor of Feminist Criminology), along with DWC Chair Kim Cook will be conducting this training session for those interested in reviewing manuscripts for a wide array of scholarly journals.  This session is designed for junior faculty and graduate students who are interested in learning the referee process for peer review journals.  Over a two-session time slot, the training will cover:

History, purpose and importance of peer review
How do editors select reviewers?  The relationship between the editor and the reviewers
Ethics and responsibility (Academic integrity, conflict of interest, defamation)
Bias (sexism, racism, classism, ethnocentrism, homophobia)
Journal-specific peer review procedures
What to look for in a manuscript
How to write constructive feedback to the author and editor
Making the final decision
Reviewing  the revised manuscript
Maneuvering through online reviewing systems: registering as a reviewer, deciding to accept a manuscript, completing the written review
Strategies for tackling reviews and getting the most from them

The training session will also include an interactive component in which participants critique samples of completed article reviews.

Participants will receive a certificate of attendance from the DWC.

If you are interested in attending, please RSVP to Rosemary Barberet at femcrim@jjay.cuny.edu.  Walk-ins are also very welcome!

Congrats to the 2014 DWC Student Paper Award Winners

gold-trophy

Please join me in congratulating the winners and attend the DWC breakfast meeting on Thursday morning where they will be able to receive their awards.

The winner of the graduate student competition for 2014 is Jaclyn Cwick (University of Missouri-St. Louis) for her paper “Revisiting Coercive Mobility: Women’s Social Capital and Neighborhood Social Control.” 

Abstract

Women’s social capital is investigated as a mechanism to more fully explain the process by which concentrated incarceration unfolds and results in reductions in neighborhood informal social control. Previous work has shown that coercive mobility, referring to involuntary mobility due to prison admissions and returns, impedes informal control by disrupting network ties, but this work has focused almost entirely on the collateral consequences of the incarcerated. The present work moves forward by proposing a gendered theory of coercive mobility, which synthesizes the collateral consequences of incarceration to women who remain in the community, along with coercive mobility theory and social capital.

The winner of the undergraduate competition is Erin Hoffman (Southern Connecticut State University) for her paper “Predicting Rates of Sexual Violence using State-Level Risk Factors.”

Abstract 

This study analyzed the ability of societal factors to predict rates of rape and other sexual offenses among the 50 states (N=50). Predictors of state-level sexual violence were organized into five different models based on conceptual similarities and prior research. Two simultaneous linear regression equations were calculated with rates of sexual violence (i.e., arrests for rape and other sexual offenses) as the two criterion variables. Results suggest the need for states to (a) consider implementing sentencing guidelines for rape, and (b) recruit more female law enforcement officers, as both factors may help states lessen the incidence of sexual violence.​