All Stories

  1. Citizenship-Based Disparities in Incarceration: A Comparative Look at Asia, Latin America, and the Caribbean
  2. The Educational Background of the Most-Cited Scholars in Criminology and Criminal Justice
  3. The Waxing and Waning of Criminological Citation Careers of Scholars and Works, 1986-2020
  4. Differential treatment by citizenship within European criminal justice systems
  5. How immigration, level of unemployment, and income inequality affect crime in Europe
  6. Inequality in Incarceration of Foreign Citizens Between Western Europe and Anglosphere Countries: Implications for Supporting Equitable Criminal Justice Systems.
  7. Disparate incarceration rates of foreign citizens in Europe compared to Anglo‐Saxon countries
  8. Evaluating Citation Analysis: Introduction to the Special Issue
  9. Improving Citation Analysis: Taking Account of Order of Authors and Number of Different Articles in Which a Scholar Is Cited
  10. Citation Data and Analysis: Limitations and Shortcomings
  11. An Examination of Article Productivity and Influence among Criminology and Criminal Justice Doctoral Faculty, 2015–2021
  12. Citation Analysis in Criminology and Criminal Justice
  13. Conclusions
  14. Methodology
  15. Most-Cited Scholars in 20 Journals
  16. Most-Cited Scholars in Four International Journals
  17. Most-Cited Scholars in Six American Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals
  18. Changes in the Most Cited Scholars in Five International Journals Between 2006 and 2020
  19. Changes in Scholarly Influence in Major American Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals between 1986 and 2015
  20. Changes in the Most-Cited Scholars in 20 Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals Between 1990 and 2015 and Comparisons with the Asian Journal of Criminology
  21. Predictive Extrinsic Factors in Multiple Victim Shootings
  22. Red light camera interventions for reducing traffic violations and traffic crashes: A systematic review
  23. The reporting and help‐seeking behaviors of domestic violence victims with criminal backgrounds
  24. Thirty Years of Scholarly Influence in International Journals and Its Relation to the Most-Cited Scholars in Asian Criminology
  25. Who Are the Most-Cited Scholars in Asian Criminology Compared with Australia, New Zealand, North America, and Europe?
  26. Most-Cited Articles and Authors in Crime and Justice, 1979–2015
  27. Periodicity of crime
  28. PROTOCOL: Red light camera interventions for reducing traffic violations and crashes: a systematic review
  29. Changes in the Most-Cited Scholars and Works Over 25 Years: The Evolution of the Field of Criminology and Criminal Justice
  30. The Most Cited Scholars in Five International Criminology Journals, 2006–10
  31. Publication Productivity of Criminologists
  32. Most-Cited Scholars in Criminology and Criminal Justice, 1986-2010
  33. Sampling
  34. Citation Analysis in Criminology and Criminal Justice
  35. Methodology
  36. Most-Cited Scholars in 20 Journals
  37. Conclusions
  38. Most-Cited Scholars in Four International Journals
  39. Most-Cited Scholars in Six American Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals
  40. Sporting Events and the Spatial Patterning of Crime in South Africa: Local Interpretations and International Implications
  41. Is it safer behind the gates? Crime and gated communities in South Africa
  42. Burglary in Gated Communities
  43. Scholarly Influence in Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals in 1990–2005
  44. Changes in Scholarly Influence in Major American Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals Between 1986 and 2005
  45. Changes in Scholarly Influence in Major International Criminology Journals, 1986–2005
  46. Scholarly Influence and Prestige in Criminology and Criminal Justice
  47. Seasonal Assault and Neighborhood Deprivation in South Africa
  48. Scholarly influence in criminology and criminal justice journals in 1990–2000
  49. Scholarly Influence in Criminal Justice: Foreword to the Special Issue
  50. Changes in Scholarly Influence in Major International Criminology Journals
  51. Changes in Scholarly Influence in Major American Criminology and Criminal Justice Journals between 1986 and 2000
  52. Where are they now? Trajectories of publication “stars” from American criminology and criminal justice programs
  53. The curve is still out there: A reply to Bushman, Wang, and Anderson's (2005) "Is the curve relating temperature to aggression linear or curvilinear?"
  54. Temperature, City Size, and the Southern Subculture of Violence: Support for Social Escape/Avoidance (SEA) Theory1
  55. Outdoor Temperature, Climate Control, and Criminal Assault
  56. Global Warming and U.S. Crime Rates
  57. Even criminals take a holiday: Instrumental and expressive crimes on major and minor holidays
  58. Temperature, Routine Activities, and Domestic Violence: A Reanalysis
  59. WEATHER, SEASONAL TRENDS AND PROPERTY CRIMES IN MINNEAPOLIS, 1987–1988. A MODERATOR-VARIABLE TIME-SERIES ANALYSIS OF ROUTINE ACTIVITIES
  60. Weather, Disorderly Conduct, and Assaults: From Social Contact to Social Avoidance
  61. Weather, Disorderly Conduct, and Assaults
  62. Testing a Typology of Police Performance Measures: An Empirical Study of Police Services
  63. Journal publications of Ph.D. graduates from American criminology and criminal justice programs
  64. Violence is a curvilinear function of temperature in Dallas: A replication.
  65. Changes in the most-cited scholars in twenty criminology and criminal justice journals between 1990 and 1995
  66. ERRORS OF COMMISSION AND OMISSION: COMMENT ON ANDERSON AND ANDERSON'S (1998) 'TEMPERATURE AND AGGRESSION'
  67. Assessing the quality of American doctoral program faculty in criminology and criminal justice, 1991–1995
  68. Changes in the most-cited scholars in major american criminology and criminal justice journals between 1986–1990 and 1991–1995
  69. CHANGES IN THE MOST-CITED SCHOLARS IN MAJOR INTERNATIONAL JOURNALS BETWEEN 1986-90 AND 1991-95
  70. Assault as a function of time and temperature: A moderator-variable time-series analysis.
  71. One Pinch
  72. The effect of weather and temporal variations on calls for police service
  73. The Citizen Police Academy: A recipe for improving police-community relations
  74. The most-cited scholars in criminal justice textbooks, 1989–1993
  75. Crime and Justice and the Criminal Justice and Criminology Literature
  76. The Validity of Citations as a Measure of Influence in Criminology
  77. Who are the most-cited scholars in major American criminology and criminal justice journals?
  78. WHO ARE THE MOST INFLUENTIAL CRIMINOLOGISTS IN THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING WORLD?
  79. The prediction of police calls for service: The influence of weather and temporal variables on rape and domestic violence
  80. The Variable Effects of Arrest on Criminal Careers: The Milwaukee Domestic Violence Experiment
  81. FROM INITIAL DETERRENCE TO LONGTERM ESCALATION: SHORT-CUSTODY ARREST FOR POVERTY GHETTO DOMESTIC VIOLENCE*
  82. Weather and Violent Crime
  83. DIFFERENCES BETWEEN BRITISH AND AMERICAN CRIMINOLOGY
  84. WEATHER AND CRIME
  85. The Impact of Research on Legal Policy: The Minneapolis Domestic Violence Experiment
  86. Stately Pleasure Domes: Baseball Stadiums, Attendance, and Performance
  87. The Ins and Outs of Temperature and Assault
  88. Violence Is a Curvilinear Function of Temperature in Dallas: A Replication