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We're very excited to present our seventh episode of season 2, a conversation with Dale Ballucci, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Western University. In this episode, we discussed the policing of intimate partner violence, the importance of crime analysts, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present our sixth episode of season 2, a conversation with Kim Varma, Associate Professor of Criminology at Ryerson University. In this episode, we discussed the Canadian youth justice landscape, restorative justice, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present our fifth episode of season 2, a conversation with Natasha Tusikov, Assistant Professor of Criminology at York University. In this episode, we discussed internet governance, smart cities, her recent work on PayPal and social media platforms, and so much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present our fourth episode of season 2, a conversation with Pamela Palmater, Professor and the Chair in Indigenous Governance at Ryerson University. In this episode, we discussed her research and activism on Indigenous governance, as well as issues impacting Indigenous communities in Canada. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present our third episode of season 2, a conversation with Kanika Samuels-Wortley from the Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Carleton University. We discussed her research on the overrepresentation of Black and Indigenous youth in the criminal justice system, applying a critical race lens to studies of perceptions of police, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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For this episode, we decided to switch things up and sit down with not one but two scholars: Alexander McClelland of Carleton University's Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice, and Alex Luscombe from the University of Toronto's Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies. Alexander and Alex stopped by to talk at length about their Policing the Pandemic Mapping Project, which tracks expansions of police power and unequal enforcement in response to COVID-19. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field!
Relevant links:
Policing the Pandemic website: www.policingthepandemic.ca
The project's first report for the CCLA: https://ccla.org/fines-report/
A report for McGill's Centre for Media, Technology, and Democracy: https://www.mediatechdemocracy.com/projects/surveillance-privacy
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Welcome back to Season 2 of Criminologia! In this episode, we are joined by Giancarlo Fiorella, a PhD candidate from the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies at the University of Toronto. Giancarlo stopped by to chat about his dissertation project on protest policing in Venezuela, his work as a Senior Investigator at Bellingcat, and so much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field!
Links to some of Giancarlo's work:
https://www.bellingcat.com/news/2020/05/05/the-invasion-of-venezuela-brought-to-you-by-silvercorp-usa/https://www.bellingcat.com/resources/how-tos/2019/10/15/a-beginners-guide-to-flight-tracking/ https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/venezuela/2019-04-17/will-guaido-call-us-military-intervention -
We're very excited to present to you our sixth episode, a conversation with Matthew Light from the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies at the University of Toronto. In this episode, we discuss his extensive experience in comparative research on informal security institutions in post-Soviet countries, the connections between migration, organized crime, and corruption, and much more. This will be our last episode for the summer while we focus on our research, but we will be back this September with a new slate of episodes. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present to you our fifth episode, a conversation with Sandra Bucerius from the Department of Sociology at the University of Alberta. In this episode, we discuss her most recent project on the realities of living and working in prisons, the influence of COVID-19 on the carceral experience, her ethnographic work in Germany, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present to you our fourth episode, a conversation with Audrey Macklin, Director of the Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies at the University of Toronto. In this episode, we discuss private refugee sponsorship, crimes against citizenship, and the impacts of COVID-19 on borders. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We're very excited to present to you our third episode, a conversation with Graham Hudson from the Department of Criminology at Ryerson University. In this episode, we discuss sanctuary cities, the impacts of COVID-19, secret trials, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We’re very excited to present to you our second episode, a conversation with Mugambi Jouet from the Faculty of Law at McGill University. In this episode, we discussed American exceptionalism and criminal justice, the value of comparative research, and his fascinating journey through academia and beyond. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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We’re very excited to present to you our inaugural episode, a conversation with Rosemary Gartner, Professor Emerita at the University of Toronto’s Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies. Over the course of our chat, we talked about criminology as a discipline, her own experiences in academia, what it takes to publish social science research, and much more. Subscribe to Criminologia for more interviews with scholars from the field.
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Derived from the Latin word crīmen which is translated to “accusation”, and the Greek word -λογία, -logia, meaning “reason”, the term criminology was first coined in 1885 by Italian law professor Raffaele GA RO FA LO as criminologia. Often described as an interdisciplinary “field” rather than a discipline, criminology is the scientific study of the nature, causes, consequences and prevention of criminal behaviour at the individual, group, and societal levels. Criminology transverses not only disciplinary boundaries, but also geographical, ideological and political ones, making it a truly interdisciplinary field of study dedicated to research on social issues from a multidimensional perspective.
It’s with that in mind that we introduce you to Criminologia, an academic, criminology-themed podcast hosted by us, Daniel Konikoff and Jona Zyfi, two PhD students at the University of Toronto’s Centre for Criminology and Sociolegal Studies, . The series aims to facilitate critical dialogue and present theoretical ideas, empirical research findings, and policy solutions not only to social science scholars, but also criminal justice practitioners and the general public. Hosting leading academics, as well as graduate students, episodes will cover a range of contemporary issues related to criminology such as crime, rights and justice, the criminal justice system, organized crime and terrorism, immigration, as well as law and society. Subscribe to Criminologia now to keep up with the latest word from the field, and stay tuned for our first episode featuring University of Toronto Professor Emerita Rosemary Gartner.