Your First Five Crime Studies of February 29
Today's crime studies include work on software piracy
I'm Aaron Jacklin, and this is Explaining Crime, an independent newsletter that helps you explain crime to your audience.
Your First Five is a daily (M-F) series that publishes a curated selection of recent research related to crime and justice. Each post contains links to new studies that I hope will enhance your work explaining crime. Published each weekday at about 7 a.m., E.S.T.
These new criminology and criminal justice studies were published recently by journals I monitor:
1. Trajectories of Software Piracy and Multi-Domain Predictors, published in Crime & Delinquency. (Restricted access)
2. ‘When you own the time, it’s seamless, but when you don’t, it’s horrific’: critical, public order and major incident decision-making in policing, published in Policing and Society. (Restricted access)
3. On the Overlap of Commercial Sexual Exploitation and Intimate Partner Violence: An Exploratory Examination of Trauma-Related Shame, published in Journal of Interpersonal Violence. (Restricted access)
4. Intimate partner violence and third-party legal mobilization: considering the role of sexuality, gender, and violence severity, published in Journal of Experimental Criminology. (Restricted access)
5. Rates and Features of Detection Avoidance in Intimate Partner Femicide in Australia, published in Homicide Studies. (Open access)
I might cover some of these studies further in Understanding Crime. If one sounds interesting or important, let me know in the comments.
Right now, I'm considering number 1. Here's why:
This study aims to deepen the understanding of software piracy through a developmental perspective and risk and protective factors approach. We employ group-based trajectory modeling to identify the trajectories of software piracy and investigate the influence of various risk and protective factors…