Your First Five Crime Studies of July 30
All of today's research relates to college and university students
Hello! I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you think and write about crime responsibly.
Published Tuesdays and Thursdays, Your First Five is a free tip sheet made up of a curated selection of recent research related to crime and justice.
These new studies related to criminology and criminal justice were published recently by journals I monitor.
1. Cold case reviews: college students as a force multiplier [Policing: An International Journal]
2. Cultivating just campus communities: engaging university students in developing restorative justice alternatives [Contemporary Justice Review]
3. Cyberbullying and cyberstalking victimisation among university students: A narrative systematic review [International Review of Victimology]
4. Associations Between PTSD and Depressive Symptoms and Victimization Among Female College Students: A Latent Class Analysis [Journal of Interpersonal Violence]
5. “I Don’t Think a Broken Spirit Can Be Quantified”: Perceptions of College Victimization and Its Consequences Among Students at a Hispanic-Serving Institution [Journal of Interpersonal Violence]
I might cover some of these studies further in Understanding Crime. If one sounds interesting or important, let me know in the comments.
Your First Five and the directories I'm experimenting with are the output of my research discovery system.