ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice

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Links

Below is a listing of organizations or helpful websites that our members may be interested in:

  • Convict Criminology
  • Cultural Criminology
  • Green Criminology
  • Uprooting Criminology
  • ASC Membership Directory
  • Other ASC Divisions

Listing does not imply endorsement of these organizations or reflect the views of the DCCSJ.

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ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice

3 months ago

ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice
Dear DCCSJ Members,We hope you enjoyed the 2025 ASC Annual Meeting last week, and if you were unable to attend, we hope to see you next year in Chicago!On behalf of the Division on Critical Criminology and Social Justice, we are pleased to announce the results of the 2025 DCCSJ elections, which were shared during our business and general meetings at the ASC conference.Please join us in congratulating our newly elected leadership team:· Chair: Emily Troshynski, Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV)· Vice-Chair: Eddy Green, Associate Professor, Department of Criminal Justice, Roosevelt University· Secretary/Treasurer: Kaitlyn Selman, Assistant Professor, Department of Criminal Justice Sciences, Illinois State UniversityExecutive Counselors (2026–2028) (listed alphabetically by last name):· Maya Barak, Associate Professor, Department of Criminal Justice Studies, University of Michigan-Dearborn· Veronica Gonzalez, Assistant Professor, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of South Carolina· Sergio Grossi, Assistant Professor, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY.These dedicated members will serve as your DCCSJ Executive Committee from 2026 through 2028, and we are grateful for their willingness to lead and represent the division.We wish each of them the very best as they begin their terms.Please feel welcome to reach out to any member of the Executive Committee with DCCSJ-related questions, ideas, or requests.We are excited for the work ahead and look forward to continuing to strengthen our community together.Sincerely,Nicholas Walrath, Communications TeamJessica Morgan, Communications Team ... See MoreSee Less
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ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice

4 months ago

ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice
We are very happy to announce the 2025 DCCSJ Award Winners!Book Award: Gratuitous Angst in White America by Deena Isom Critical Criminologist of the Year Award (David Goyes): Dr. José Atiles and Dr. Bill McClanahanBest Article: “The Effects of Criminalisation on Activists: The Case of the NoTAP Environmental Movement” by Anna Di RoncoGraduate Paper: “No One Mourns the Wickard: Towards a Hauntological Legal Analysis” by Alyssa N. Shallenberger“‘Democracy is Alive and Well in Atlanta’: RICO, Magical-Abductive Profiling, and the Politics of Exception in Criminalizing Stop Cop City” by Soleil Smith ... See MoreSee Less
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ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice

7 months ago

ASC Division on Critical Criminology & Social Justice
DCCSJ Member Publication Alert!“Please see the latest from Dr. Judah Schept (DCCSJ Executive Counselor)! In a six-part series, Judah Schept, Lydia Pelot-Hobbs, Craig Gilmore, and Ruth Wilson Gilmore “look at how organizers can adapt lessons learned in twenty-five years of abolitionist organizing to their own political terrains, with examples from Appalachia, California, and Louisiana.Read it here! inquest.org/abolitionist-lessons-from-the-prison-belts/Members: if you have recent publications you’d like us to share with the membership, please email us at dccsjcommsteam@gmail.com ... See MoreSee Less

Abolitionist Lessons from the Prison Belts - Ruth Wilson Gilmore, Craig Gilmore, Judah Schept, & Lydia Pelot-Hobbs - Inquest

inquest.org

In a six-part series, we look at how organizers can adapt lessons learned in twenty-five years of abolitionist organizing to their own political terrains, with examples from Appalachia, California, and Louisiana.
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