2022-2023 UMass Dartmouth Undergraduate Catalog [Archived Catalog]
Department of Crime and Justice Studies
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Administrative Assistant
Rebecca Leverett
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/rleverett/
Faculty
Lisa Marie Alatorre, Lecturer
Tammi Arford, Associate Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/tarford/
Aneesa Baboolal, Assistant Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/ababoolal/
Brian Broadrose, Assistant Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/bbroadrose/
Erin Katie Krafft, Assistant Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/ekrafft/
Susan Krumholz Professor Emeritus
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/skrumholz/
C. Lipou Laliemthavisay, Esq., Lecturer
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/claliemthavisay/
Eric Larson, Associate Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/elarson/
Vanessa Lovelace, Assistant Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/vlovelace/
Nicolas Maloof, Lecturer
Toniqua Mikell, Assistant Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/tmikell/
Caryl Nuñez, Lecturer
Martin Powell, Lecturer
Ashley Ruderman-Looff, Lecturer & Assistant Director for Advocacy and Education in the Center for Women, Gender and Sexuality
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/arudermanlooff/
Viviane Saleh-Hanna, Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/vhanna/
Heather Turcotte, Department Chairperson and Associate Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/hturcotte/
Tryon Woods, Associate Professor
https://www.umassd.edu/directory/twoods/
Department of Crime and Justice Studies Mission
The department of Crime and Justice Studies brings together the academic fields of criminology, criminal justice and justice studies while bridging the social sciences, humanities and sciences. We offer a multi-disciplinary program that specializes in the study of the “crime” and “justice” policies and procedures to analyze the nature of structural, institutional, and transnational violence while providing students with the critical histories and skills they need to transform unjust conditions and improve society and their communities.
CJS provides teachings and research on the context, history, media, politics, policy, powers and accountabilities of the criminal justice system and the multiple agencies that engage with its work throughout society. The multi-disciplinary nature of the CJS program engages students with various alternative models of justice including restorative and transformative justice, conflict resolution and mediation, and abolitionism. Starting in our classrooms, students learn cross-agency skills and teachings that allow them to work within and across various ideologies and applications of criminal justice, law enforcement, and the legal system. Our students have graduated to work in the fields of law enforcement, courts, corrections, public administration, social services, youth services, non-profits agencies, corporate settings, education, and community organizations. CJS students also have gone on to complete their graduate degrees in law, master’s, and various doctoral programs.
Admission into the Major
Students seeking admission to Crime and Justice Studies must have a minimum overall GPA of 2.0.
Students interested in majoring in Crime and Justice Studies should contact the Chair of the Crime and Justice Studies Program for questions about the program, to discuss the program requirements and to arrange for a CJS faculty advisor.
Minimum Requirements for Graduation:
To successfully complete the program for graduation, all students must:
- Maintain a minimum of a 2.75 GPA in the major
- Maintain a minimum of a 2.0 GPA overall
- Meet the CJS major requirements listed below here: https://catalog.umassd.edu/preview_program.php?catoid=73&poid=10557&returnto=5911
- Complete 30 credits at 300/400 level (including all courses in the major except Experiential Learning)
- Complete a minimum of 120 credits with at least 45 at UMass Dartmouth
- Complete the University Studies requirements
- Complete the distribution requirements of the College of Arts and Sciences
- All courses counting for the major must be completed with a C- or higher
- Complete all required CJS core courses, 4 CJS electives within the Crime and Justice Studies department.
Student Learning Goals
Discipline-specific:
- Identify and contextualize core theories, methods, and texts in the field;
- Application of Crime and Justice concepts to personal, community, and global experience;
- Present and communicate organized and coherent arguments in written and oral forms;
- Demonstrate historical and contemporary understanding of systems of injustice, institutionalized violence, and structural oppression;
- Distinguish and make connections between structures of power (e.g., racism, sexism, heterosexism, classism, ageism, etc.); and
- Evaluate the utility of justice frameworks.
General skills:
- Learn how to construct cogent and critical arguments through the development of academic writing and presentation skills;
- Develop an understanding of, and critically evaluate, multi-disciplinary research and its implementation into practice; and
- Identify historical and contemporary frameworks of inequality, violence, and justice.
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