DATA/REPORTS
Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice
Contains reports and data on topics including crime and victims; prosecution, courts and sentencing; and special topics such as drugs and crime, homicide trends, firearms and crime and reentry trends.
Commission on Immigration, American Bar Association
The ABA established the commission in 2002 to direct its efforts ensuring fair treatment and full due process rights for immigrants and refugees in the United States. The commission works extensively on legal issues affecting immigrant families and children. The ABA’s Center on Children and the Law is also a good resource.
Corrections Statistics, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice
Includes statistics on capital punishment, jails, prisons, probation and parole.
Crime, FedStats
FedStats offers a full range of official statistical information available to the public from the Federal Government. The Crime page offers links to other government sources for crime and justice stats.
Juvenile Justice: National Criminal Justice Reference Service , Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice
The site features data, trends and reports on topics such as adjudication of juvenile cases, crime in schools, female juvenile delinquents, gangs, curfews, juvenile sex offenders and more.
National Archive of Criminal Justice Data (NACJD), Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research
NACJD facilitates and encourages research in criminal justice through computerized data sources and training in quantitative analysis of crime and justice data.
National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse, American Prosecutors Research Institute
The Center publishes updates on new legislation, case law and relevant news about criminal child abuse investigations and prosecutions.
National Juvenile Court Data Archive , Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, Department of Justice
The National Juvenile Court Data Archive houses the automated records of cases handled by courts with juvenile jurisdiction. The archive was established to promote access to automated juvenile court data sets for juvenile justice research and policymaking efforts.
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, U.S. Department of Justice
OJJDP provides data on juvenile crime, delinquency prevention and violence and victimization. Its online Statistical Briefing Book offers direct access to statistics and trends in juvenile justice and victimization. Also see: Trends in the Murder of Juveniles: 1980–2000.
"Positive Youth Justice: Framing Justice Interventions Using the Concepts of Positive Youth Development," 2010, Coalition for Juvenile Justice
Positive youth development could be an effective framework for designing general interventions for young offenders. This report argues such a framework would encourage youth justice systems to focus on protective factors as well as risk factors, strengths as well as problems, and broader efforts to facilitate successful transitions to adulthood for justice-involved youth.
"Reforming Juvenile Justice Systems," 2010, Urban Institute
Reclaiming Futures (RF) is a system reform initiative of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation focusing on substance abuse interventions in the juvenile justice system. A previous evaluation found Reclaiming Futures to be a promising strategy, however, many of the features that may be responsible for the positive system changes seen in the Reclaiming Futures initiative were inspired by practices not yet tested thoroughly by evaluators. This report examines two such components of the Reclaiming Futures initiative: positive youth development and cultural competence.
"Sexual Victimization In Juvenile Facilities Reported By Youth, 2009-2009," 2010, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice
The report provides estimates of sexual victimization reported by youth in juvenile facilities by type of activity, including youth-on-youth sexual contact, staff sexual misconduct and level of coercion. It estimates that 12 percent of adjudicated youth in state-operated and local or privately-operated juvenile facilities reported experiencing one or more incidents of sexual victimization by another youth or facility staff member.
State Assessments, National Juvenile Defender Center (NJDC)
The National Juvenile Defender Center conducts state-based assessments of access to and quality of juvenile defense counsel. These reports are part of a nationwide effort to improve juvenile indigent defense across the country. The assessments provide comprehensive examinations of the systemic and institutional barriers that prevent lawyers from providing adequate legal services to indigent children within a particular state legal system.
State Data on Juvenile Justice (NJDC), National Juvenile Defender Center
This page features statutes, court rules and other policies related to juvenile justice on topics such as rules for transfer to adult court; ages of juvenile court jurisdiction; and rates of disproportionate minority confinement.
State Sex Offender Registries, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Provides links to each state's sex offender registry Web site.
ACADEMIC/RESEARCH EXPERTS
David Altschuler Ph.D., Principal Research Scientist
School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University
Wyman Building, 3400 N. Charles St., Room 548
Baltimore, MD 21218
410.516.7179; dma@jhu.edu
Altschuler’s work focuses on juvenile crime and justice system sanctioning, juvenile aftercare and parole, offender reentry, privatization in juvenile corrections, and drug involvement and crime among inner-city youth. He was director and co-principal investigator for a federally funded project that developed a model of intensive aftercare for high-risk juvenile parolees released from secure correctional facilities.
Troy Armstrong Ph.D., Professor of Anthropology and Director
Center for Delinquency and Crime Policy Studies, California State University, Sacramento
7750 College Town Drive, Suite 104
Sacramento, CA 95826
916.278.6259, troy@saclink.csus.edu
Armstrong directs the center, and he's co-principal investigator on the Intensive Juvenile Aftercare Project funded by federal Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. It's a research-based approach to transitioning youth from confinement back into the community. Armstrong researches restitution and community service; intensive probation; and community-based alternatives to formal justice system processing.
Richard Barth Ph.D., Dean
School of Social Work, University of Maryland, Baltimore
525 W. Redwood St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
410.706.7794; rbarth@ssw.umaryland.edu
Barth's research interests include child abuse and neglect, foster care dynamics, adoption policy, shared family care, program evaluation and linkages between child welfare and juvenile justice services. He's the co-author of several books, including "Evidence for Child Welfare Policy Reform" (2005) and is co-principal investigator of the National Study of Child and Adolescent Well-Being. He has received numerous awards and was a senior Fulbright specialist in Australia in 2006.
Jeffrey Butts Ph.D., Executive Director
Criminal Justice Research and Evaluation Center
John Jay College of Criminal Justice
City University of New York
555 West 57th Street, Suite 605
New York, NY 10019
212.237.8486; jbutts@jjay.cuny.edu
Butts is a former Chapin Hall Research Fellow, and professor in the University of Chicago's School of Social Service Administration. Since 1991, he has managed more than $8 million of funded research, including projects on teen courts, juvenile drug courts, substance abuse treatment and juvenile court processing. He also directed the Urban Institute's Program on Youth Justice. Earlier, he was a researcher with the National Center for Juvenile Justice in Pittsburgh. For more information click here.
Michael Carlie Ph.D., Professor
Department of Sociology, Anthropology and Criminology, Missouri State University
901 S. National Ave.
Springfield, MO 65804
417.836.5642; MichaelCarlie@MissouriState.edu
Carlie is a specialist in criminology/criminal justice, focusing on corrections, law enforcement and juvenile delinquency -- particularly street gangs. He has been a consultant to police departments and to the Missouri and Indiana departments of corrections. Carlie is the author of "Into the Abyss: A Personal Journey into the World of Street Gangs" (self-published, 2002) and has taught for six years in a large state penitentiary.
Stephen John Ceci Ph.D., Helen L. Carr Professor of Developmental Psychology
Department of Human Development, Cornell University
M Van Rensselaer Hall, Room G80
Ithaca, NY 14853
607.255.0828; sjc9@cornell.edu
Ceci’s expertise is child witness research, particularly the accuracy of children's memory and courtroom testimony in regard to allegations of physical abuse, sexual abuse and neglect. His studies of children's suggestibility detailed in his 1995 APA bestselling book, "Jeopardy in the Courtroom: A Scientific Analysis of Children's Testimony," have been cited by courts at all levels. In addition to conducting scientific research, Ceci prepares curriculum to assist judges in assessing children's competence; delivers workshops for judges, mental health and law enforcement professionals across the U.S. and Canada; and conducts translational research for the legal community on child witness issues.
Meda Chesney-Lind Ph.D., Professor of Women's Studies
Women's Studies Program, University of Hawaii at Manoa
2424 Maile Way
Honolulu, HI 96822
808.956.6313; meda@hawaii.edu
Chesney-Lind researches girls’ delinquency and women’s crime. She has studied women’s imprisonment; youth gangs; the sociology of gender with an emphasis on women and systems of social control; and the victimization of women and girls. Her recent books include “Invisible Punishment: The Collateral Consequences of Mass Imprisonment” (New Press, 2002) and “Beyond Bad Girls: Gender, Violence and Hype” (Routledge, 2007).
Delores E. Craig-Moreland Ph.D., Associate Professor of Criminal Justice
Criminal Justice Program, Wichita State University
311 Lindquist Hall
Wichita, KS 67260
316.978.6519; delores.craig@wichita.edu
Craig-Moreland researches juvenile justice, juvenile corrections and delinquency prevention. She has done various forms of applied research with the Kansas Juvenile Justice Authority.
Bernardine Dohrn, Director
Children & Family Justice Center, Northwestern University
Bluhm Legal Clinic
375 E. Chicago Ave.
Chicago, IL 60611
312.503.0396; b-dohrn@law.northwestern.edu
Dohrn is the center's founding director and a clinical associate professor of law. She teaches, lectures and writes about children's law and justice as well as the international human rights. Dohrn was a member of the Expert Work Group for the Adoption 2002 Project of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, the Domestic Violence Child Abuse Working Group of the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges, and the steering committee of the Illinois Family Violence Coordinating Committee. In the late 1960s, Dohrn was a member of the radical Weathermen group, which plotted against the U.S. government.
Steven Drizin, Director
Center on Wrongful Convictions, Northwestern University School of Law
357 E. Chicago Ave.
Chicago, IL 60611
312.503.6608; s-drizin@law.northwestern.edu
Drizin is a Clinical Professor at Northwestern Law School where he has been on the faculty since 1991. He is also the Assistant Director of the Bluhm Legal Clinic, and since March 2004, has been serving as the Legal Director of the Clinic's renowned Center on Wrongful Convictions. Drizin teaches criminal law to first-year law students and supervises second- and third-year students in representing children and adolescents in the juvenile and criminal courts of Cook County, Ill. He has written numerous articles and op-ed pieces on juvenile justice-related matters, including false confessions, videotaping interrogations, the juvenile death penalty and the efficacy of prosecuting children as adults.
Finn-Aage Esbensen Ph.D., E. Desmond Lee Professor of Youth Crime and Violence
Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Missouri-St. Louis
8001 Natural Bridge Road
St. Louis, MO 63121
314.516.4619; esbensen@umsl.edu
Esbensen is the university's E. Desmond Lee Professor of Youth Crime and Violence. He's principal investigator for two current, federally funded projects: on teens, crime and community works training (scheduled to conclude in 2008); and on a middle school-based prevention program taught by uniformed law enforcement officers (through 2011). His research has covered a broad range of topics, and his methodologies have included participant observation in a county jail and a longitudinal national survey of adolescents.
Jeffrey Fagan Ph.D., Professor
Director, The Center on Crime, Community and the Law
Columbia University School of Law
435 W. 116th St.
Room 634, Box D-18
New York, NY 10027
212.854.2624; jfagan@law.columbia.edu
Fagan focuses his research and scholarship on crime, law and social policy. Currently, he's examining the jurisprudence of adolescent crime, social contagion theories of violence and error rates in capital punishment, among other topics. He is a fellow of the American Society of Criminology and serves as chair of its national policy committee. He's also on the National Research Council's committee on law and justice, the MacArthur Foundation’s Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice and the Russell Sage Foundation's incarceration working group. He was on the National Research Council panel on family violence interventions. A past editor of the Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency, Fagan serves on the editorial boards of several criminology and law journals. He wrote “Changing Borders of Juvenile Justice” (University of Chicago Press, 2000), which the Society for Research on Adolescence cited as a best book on social policy.
Barry Feld, Centennial Professor of Law
University of Minnesota Law School
340 Mondale Hall
229 19th Ave. South
Minneapolis, MN 55455
612.625.9389; feldx001@umn.edu
Feld teaches criminal procedure, juvenile law, torts, and education and law. In addition to his law degree, he holds a doctorate in sociology. He has written eight books and about 70 articles and book chapters on juvenile justice, focusing on serious young offenders, procedural justice in juvenile court, police interrogation of juveniles, youth sentencing policy and race. “Bad Kids: Race and the Transformation of the Juvenile Court” (Oxford University Press, 1999) was named an outstanding book by the American Society of Criminology and the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Feld was a prosecutor in the Hennepin County (Minn.) Attorney’s Office and a co-reporter of the Minnesota Supreme Court’s Juvenile Court Rules of Procedure Advisory Committee.
Stephen Gavazzi, Professor
Department of Human Development and Family Science, Ohio State University
171B Campbell, 1787 Neil Ave.
Columbus, OH 43210
614.292.5620; SGavazzi@ehe.osu.edu
Gavazzi established a research program that identifies the impact of family dynamics on adolescent development and problem behavior. He also created the Growing Up FAST Program, a family-based diversion initiative for use with juvenile offenders and their families. He's working on a Web-based instrument known as the Global Risk Assessment Device, designed to measure potential threats to the development of adolescents in the juvenile justice system. GRAD is being tested in three county juvenile courts in Ohio. Female offenders exhibited higher risk than male offenders in areas such as family and peer relations, physical health, mental health, traumatic events and accountability issues.
Philip Genty, Clinical Professor of Law
Columbia University School of Law
435 W. 116th St.
New York, NY 10027-7297
212.854.3250, pgenty@law.columbia.edu
Genty serves on the advisory group of the Federal Resource Center for Children of Prisoners. He has consulted on legal resource materials for incarcerated parents and works with several organizations that assist women prisoners. His research and teaching interests involve prisoners' rights, family law, appellate advocacy and professional responsibility.
Steven Gorelick Ph.D., Professor of Media Studies
Hunter College
365 Fifth Ave., Room 8201
New York, NY 10016
212.650.3089, Steven.Gorelick@hunter.cuny.edu
Gorelick is interim director of Hunter's M.F.A. program in integrated media arts. His major research interest is media coverage of crime and violence, especially the impact of high-profile acts of violence on communities, media institutions and the fabric of social life. Gorelick has written for numerous newspapers, plus the Journal of Crime and Delinquency, the Media Studies Journal of the Freedom Forum at Columbia University, and The Children's Beat: A Journal of Media Coverage. He's on the advisory council of the University of Washington's Dart Center on Journalism and Trauma.
Denise Gottfredson Ph.D., Professor
Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Maryland, College Park
2220D LeFrak Hall
College Park, MD 20742
301.405.4717; dgottfredson@crim.umd.edu
Gottfredson studies delinquency and delinquency prevention, particularly the effects of school environments on youth behavior. She directs evaluations of Baltimore City’s Drug Treatment Court and the Maryland After School Opportunity Grant Fund Program. She is co-principal investigator on an evaluation of the Strengthening Washington, D.C., Families Program and directs a grant to increase the use of research-based prevention practices in Maryland.
Thomas Grisso Ph.D., Clinical Psychologist and Professor of Psychiatry
University of Massachusetts Medical School
55 Lake Ave. N.
Worcester, MA 01655
508.856.3625; thomas.grisso@umassmed.edu
Grisso is a professor of psychiatry, director of the center's mental health and law core and coordinator of medical school's law-psychiatry program. His research interests include clinical forensic assessment in criminal and juvenile cases, developmental issues in juvenile law, mental health needs of young offenders, and risk of violence in adults and youths with mental disorders.
John Hagedorn Ph.D., Associate Professor
Department of Criminal Justice, University of Illinois at Chicago
1007 W. Harrison St., M/C 141
Chicago, IL 60607
312.996.8361; huk@uic.edu
Hagedorn has been studying gangs and violence for more than 15 years; his 2001 report on female gangs can be found here. He co-edited "Female Gangs in America: Essays on Girls, Gangs and Gender" (Lake View Press, 1999) and "People and Folks: Gangs, Crime and the Underclass in a Rustbelt City" (Lake View Press, 1997). His recent work compares institutionalized gangs in Chicago to other groups of armed young men around the world.
Darnell F. Hawkins Ph.D., Professor Emeritus
Department of African-American Studies, University of Illinois at Chicago
601 S. Morgan St., Room 1223
Chicago, IL 60607
312.996.2996; dfhawk@uic.edu
Hawkins is professor emeritus of African-American studies, sociology and criminal justice. He conducts research on racial and ethnic differences in rates of criminal involvement and criminal justice system processing. Hawkins served on a National Academy of Sciences panel on juvenile crime and justice; he also edited “Our Children, Their Children: Confronting Race and Ethnic Differences in American Criminal Justice” (University of Chicago Press, 2004).
Susan Kinnevy, Director of Research and Principal Investigator
Center for Research on Youth and Social Policy, School of Social Work, University of Pennsylvania
3815 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104-6179
215.573.2944; kinnevy@sp2.upenn.edu
Kinnevy directs the Center for Research on Youth and Social Policy, which works to bring about positive social change by improving the way human services are developed, delivered and evaluated. Its research, planning and technical assistance focus on issues and systems affecting vulnerable populations, particularly children, while promoting social justice and social change. CRYSP has done a meta-analysis of empirical studies examining the effectiveness of juvenile correctional and treatment programs.
Judith Kleinfeld, Professor of Psychology and Director
Boys' Project
University of Alaska Fairbanks
Fairbanks, AK 99712
907.474.5288; ffjsk@uaf.edu
Kleinfeld directs the Boys’ Project, a network of researchers, policymakers, parents, teachers and others concerned with issues facing boys. She co-directs the Northern Studies Program, an interdisciplinary program studying regional problems and policy issues. Kleinfeld's research focuses on gender and education, and she has published widely in the field. Kleinfeld received her doctorate from Harvard University, where she specialized in the education of culturally diverse children.
Peter Leone Ph.D., Director
National Center on Education, Disability and Juvenile Justice, University of Maryland
1308 Benjamin Building
College Park, MD 20742
301.405.6489; leonep@umd.edu
Leone is a professor of special education. He directs the center, which operates on contracts and limited state funding. Leon's research focuses on behavior disorders, education rights of incarcerated youth, and juvenile justice settings. He has experience in field-based research and direct service. Leone also has been an expert and monitor in class-action litigation involving juvenile corrections in several states.
Michael Lindsey Ph.D., Assistant Professor
School of Social Work, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
525 W. Redwood St.
Baltimore, MD 21201
410.706.8781; mlindsey@ssw.umaryland.edu
Lindsey trained as a social worker, with a specialization in mental health services research. He studies African American males' development in high-risk communities, depressed African American youths' access to mental health services, school-based violence prevention and early interventions, and university and community partnerships.
Doris L. MacKenzie Ph.D., Director, Professor
Evaluation Research Group,Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice
University of Maryland
2220H LeFrak Hall
College Park, MD 20742
301.405.3008; dmackenzie@crim.umd.edu
MacKenzie researches inmate adjustment to prison, the impact of intermediate sanctions on recidivism, long-term offenders, methods of predicting prison populations and boot camp prisons. She was a visiting scientist at the National Institute of Justice, where she advised federal, state and local jurisdictions on correctional boot camps, correctional policy, intermediate sanctions, research and evaluation techniques. She has directed several federally funded projects, including the Multi-Site Study of Correctional Boot Camps, Descriptive Study of Female Boot Camps, and the National Study of Juvenile Correctional Institutions. In 2007, MacKenzie as awarded a Fulbright grant to study new community corrections programs in China.
Kent Markus, Director, Professor
National Center for Adoption Law & Policy , Capital University
Capital University Law School
303 E. Broad St.
Columbus, OH 43215
614.236.6500; kmarkus@law.capital.edu
Markus is on leave from the law school, serving as chief legal counsel to Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland. Markus is founding director of the center, which is dedicated to child welfare and adoption systemic reform. He teaches in an extensive array of law fields, including adoption, criminal and administrative. Before coming to Capital in 1998, Markus was the U.S. Justice Department's deputy chief of staff and Attorney General Janet Reno's highest-ranking adviser. During his five years at Justice, Markus oversaw national implementation of the Brady Law and the 1994 Crime Act. He served as founding director of the Office of Community-Oriented Policing Services (COPS) and as the department's point person on crime policy, particularly juvenile crime and gun violence. Earlier, Markus was the Democratic National Committee's chief of staff.
Orlando L. Martinez, Founder
Martinez-Tjaden, LLP
1424 Madison St.
Grayson, GA 30017
770.965.6288; omartinez@i-ccap.com
Martinez has more than 40 years of experience in planning and managing programs serving youth and their families. He began consulting in 2003 to train agencies and states – such as Mississippi, Connecticut and Rhode Island – in improving services for at-risk youth. For the four previous years, he was commissioner of Georgia’s Department of Juvenile Justice. There, he introduced a case management system that reduced detention populations and expanded community treatment programs. Earlier, Martinez directed Colorado’s Division of Youth. His Web site derives its name from the firm's approach: integrated comprehensive client assessment and planning.
Mary Mentaberry, Executive Director
National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges
P.O. Box 8970
Reno, NV 89507
775.784.6631
Mentaberry has served as Executive Director of NCJFCJ since 2004. According to NCJFCJ's website, she is responsible for maintaining close working relationships with members of the U.S. Senate and U.S. House of Representatives and their staffs in order to ensure continued funding stream for NCJFCJ projects. She also maintains close working relationships with the Office of the Governor, State of Nevada and Nevada State Legislature in order to ensure funding from the state for NCJFCJ.
David Roush Ph.D., Director, Professor
National Juvenile Detention Association’s Center for Research & Professional Development
School of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University
1407 S. Harrison Road
East Lansing, MI 48823
517.432.1242; roush@msu.edu
Roush directs the National Juvenile Detention Association’s Center for Research & Professional Development, a resource for juvenile detention and corrections professionals. A licensed counselor, Roush conducts research and provides training supporting the concept that youth develop healthy, law-abiding lifestyles through healthy relationships with healthy adults in healthy environments. Earlier, Roush spent 17 years directing the Calhoun County (Mich.) Juvenile Home. He is past chairman of the National Commission on Correctional Health Care's board of directors and past president of both the Michigan and the National Juvenile Detention Associations. With a federal grant, Roush developed the “Desktop Guide to Good Juvenile Detention Practice” (1996).
Gail Ryan, Program Director
Perpetration Prevention Program,Kempe Children's Center
1825 Marion St.
Denver, CO 80218
303.864.5252; kempe@kempecenter.org
Ryan has worked with abusive parents and abused children, and she has treated young males who have molested children. She now trains trainers in perpetrator-prevention strategies for their respective communities. Ryan is a facilitator for the National Adolescent Perpetration Network and the National Task Force on Juvenile Sexual Offending.
Lawrence Sherman, Director
Jerry Lee Center of Criminology, University of Pennsylvania
3814 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, PA 19104
215.898.9216; lws@sas.upenn.edu
The center researches the causes and prevention of crime, studying capital punishment, juvenile delinquency, homicide and restorative justice. Its director, Sherman, was appointed Penn's first professor of criminology in 2003, with a five-year term as chair of the criminology department. He served as president of the American Academy of Political and Social Science from 2001 to 2005 and was founding president of the Academy of Experimental Criminology from 1999 to 2001.
Jeff Sprague Ph.D., Co-director, Professor
Institute on Violence and Destructive Behavior, University of Oregon
1265 University of Oregon
Eugene, OR 97403
541.346.3592; effs@uoregon.edu
A professor of special education, Sprague directs federal, state and local research and demonstration projects related to positive behavior supports, youth violence prevention, alternative education, juvenile delinquency prevention, school inclusion and school safety. He has been a classroom teacher, teacher supervisor, behavioral consultant, researcher and university teacher. Sprague contributed to several editions of the "President's Annual Reports on School Safety." He has written about school safety and school-wide positive supports, and he co-wrote "Safe School Design," a handbook for educational leaders published in 2000.
Laurence Steinberg Ph.D., Professor
Department of Psychology, Temple University
1701 N. 13th St.
Philadelphia, PA 19122
215.204.7485; lds@temple.edu
A nationally recognized expert on psychological development during adolescence, Steinberg researches topics including parent-child relationships, employment, high school reform and juvenile justice. His work has been funded by public and private organizations, including the federal departments of education and justice, the MacArthur and William T. Grant foundations and the Lilly Endowment. Steinberg has been a frequent consultant to state and federal agencies and lawmakers on child labor, secondary education, and juvenile justice policy. He is the author or editor of 10 books, including "Adolescence" (McGraw-Hill, 2005), a leading college textbook now in its seventh edition. Steinberg is president of the Society for Research on Adolescence; he also heads the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice.
Francisco Villarruel Ph.D., Professor
Department of Family and Child Ecology, Michigan State University
1407 S. Harrison Road
East Lansing, MI 48823-5286
517.432.1317; fvilla@msu.edu
Villarruel also is a senior research associate with MSU's Institute for Children, Youth and Families and the Julian Samora Research Institute, a policy research center focused on Latinos. Villarruel studies Latino youth and families, positive youth development, and developmental contextualism. He co-wrote "Lost Opportunities: The Reality of Latinos in the U.S. Criminal Justice System" (2004), which looked at factors underlying Latinos' overrepresentation and the special problems associated with prosecuting and treating substance abusers. Villarruel was co-principal investigator of a study that found Latino and Latina youth receive disparate and more punitive treatment than their white peers charged with the same types of offenses. The 2002 report, “¿Dónde Está la Justicia?” is available online here.
Jeffery Walker Ph.D., Professor
Department of Criminal Justice, University of Arkansas at Little Rock
2801 S. University Ave.
Little Rock, AK 72204
501.569.3083; jtwalker@ualr.edu
Walker has taught at the university since 1990. His research focuses on the social/environmental factors of crime. He has obtained over $9 million in grants from the Department of Justice, National Institute of Drug Abuse and others. In 2001, Walker co-wrote an Arkansas study that found sexual offenders of children often lived near schools, child care centers and parks. Walker was president of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences in 2006-07. He's been editor of ACJS Today, editor of the Journal of Criminal Justice, and and editor in chief of the Journal of Critical Criminology.
Brian Wiersema, Senior Research Specialist
Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of Maryland
2209 LeFrak
University of Maryland
College Park, MD 20742
301.405.4735; bwiersem@umd.edu
Wiersema’s research centers on improving the amount and quality of data used to study violence, particularly the measurement of violent death and injury characteristics. Recently, Wiersema established the Maryland Violent Death Reporting System, part of a national public health surveillance system that monitors the incidence and detailed characteristics of violent death (homicides, suicides and deaths of undetermined manner) by linking official records such as police, medical examiner, crime lab and death certificate data. Wiersema's interests include various aspects of violence and social control (e.g., effects of firearms laws).
Bruce Wolford Ph.D., Professor
Department of Correctional & Juvenile Justice Studies, Eastern Kentucky University
300 Stratton Building, 521 Lancaster Ave.
Richmond, KY 40475
859.622.6869; bruce.wolford@eku.edu
Wolford also directs EKU's Training Resource Center, which does research, evaluation and training for local, state and federal criminal justice agencies. Wolford is a former president of the Correctional Education Association.
Kevin Wright Ph.D., Professor and Director
Department of Human Development, Binghamton University, SUNY
P.O. Box 6000
Binghamton, NY 13902
607.777.9205; wright@binghamton.edu
Issues of interest include crime control policy; correctional program/policy development and analysis; family life and delinquency; delinquency and substance abuse prevention; and prison administration.
Franklin Zimring, William G. Simon Professor of Law
School of Law, University of California, Berkeley
383 Boalt Hall
Berkeley, CA 94720
510.642.0854; fzimring@law.berkeley.edu
Zimring’s major fields of interest are criminal justice, juvenile justice, sexual offenders and family law. He has served on the U.S. Department of Education Panel on Safe, Disciplined and Drug-Free Schools and as an advisory member of the National Research Council Panel on Juvenile Crime. He has written or co-written many books on topics including deterrence, the changing legal world of adolescence, capital punishment, the scale of imprisonment and drug control.
Patricia Puritz, Executive Director
National Juvenile Defender Center
1350 Connecticut Ave. NW, Suite 304
Washington, DC 20036
202.452.0010; ppuritz@njdc.info
The center was created in 1999 to build the juvenile defense bar's capacity to improve access to counsel and to the quality of representation for children in the justice system. NJDC provides support to public defenders, appointed counsel, law school clinical programs and nonprofit law centers to ensure quality representation. The center produces reports, training guides and practice-focused fact sheets to assist defenders.
Patricia Arthur, Senior Attorney
Juvenile Justice, National Center for Youth Law
405 14th St., 15th Floor
Oakland, CA 94612
510.835.8098
parthur@youthlaw.org
Arthur specializes in juvenile justice and complex litigation. She is co-founder and founding president of TeamChild, a Seattle-based, statewide advocacy organization that helps youth in trouble by addressing their basic health, housing and education needs. She has been lead counsel in many class-action lawsuits involving the rights of incarcerated youth and youth at risk of institutionalization.
James R. Bell, Executive Director
W. Haywood Burns Institute
180 Howard St., Suite 320
San Francisco, CA 94105
415.321.4100 Ext.101; jbell@burnsinstitute.org
Bell founded the institute, which works to reduce the overrepresentation of youth of color in juvenile justice systems. He has worked on issues such as the juvenile death penalty, mental health services and "zero tolerance" in school discipline. The institute's Web site includes a clickable map with "State Disproportionate Minority Confinement Data" drawn from state data.
Shay Bilchik, Director
Center for Juvenile Justice Reform, Georgetown University
Washington, DC
202.687.7656; sbilchik@cwla.org
Launched in spring 2007, the center supports public agency leaders in juvenile justice and related systems of care. Founding director Bilchik previously headed the federal Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention before leading the Child Welfare League of America for seven years beginning in 2000.
Sarah Bryer, Director
Coalition for Juvenile Justice, National Juvenile Justice Network
1710 Rhode Island Ave. NW
Washington, DC 20036
202.467.0864 x105; bryer@juvjustice.org
The network helps state-based juvenile justice coalitions and organizations advocate for fair, equitable and developmentally appropriate adjudication and treatment for youth and families involved in the juvenile justice system. NJJN comprises 30 states. It receives funding from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.
Stephanie Covington Ph.D., Co-Director
Center for Gender and Justice
7946 Ivanhoe Ave., Suite 201 B
La Jolla, CA 92037
858.454.8528; sc@stephaniecovington.com
A clinician, author and organizational consultant, Covington specializes in developing and implementing gender-responsive services in both the public and private sectors. She co-directs both the CGJ -- which promotes gender-responsive policies and practices for women and girls under criminal justice supervision -- and the Institute for Relational Development. Covington consulted with the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections to help it address female offenders' issues and to design an addiction treatment framework to serve both women and men. She co-authored the National Institute of Corrections' 2000 report, "Gender-Responsive Strategies: Research, Practice and Guiding Principles for Women Offenders."
Carl Wicklund, Executive Director
American Probation & Parole Association
2760 Research Park Drive
Lexington, KY 40511
859.244.8216; cwicklund@csg.org
Crowe specializes in juvenile justice issues for the international association. APPA -- which represents probation, parole and corrections professionals -- provides information, training and technical assistance on probation, parole and community-based corrections for both adult and juveniles.
Earl Dunlap, Executive Director
National Juvenile Detention Association, Eastern Kentucky University
301 Perkins Building, 521 Lancaster Ave.
Richmond, KY 40475
859.622.6259; njdaed2@aol.com
NJDA works on a series of state and federal grants promoting improved training and professional development for detention caregivers, reduced crowding in facilities and overall better quality of life in juvenile detention. Dunlap develops alternatives-to-detention and diversion programs with state and local officials nationwide.
Kim Godfrey, Deputy Director
Council of Juvenile Correctional Administrators
170 Forbes Road, Suite 106
Braintree, MA 02184
718.843.2663; kim.godfrey@cjca.net
CJCA provides education and tools to help state juvenile correction directors improve services and conditions at youth facilities and programs. CJCA won the 2004 Innovations in American Government Award for its national performance-based standards program on residential programs' quality of life.
James A. Gondles, Executive Director
American Correctional Association
4380 Forbes Blvd.
Lanham, MD 20706
703.224.0000; execoffice@aca.org
ACA is a non-profit, professional association involved in adult and juvenile corrections, community corrections, juvenile justice, and probation and parole. It works to improve correctional environments through training and professional development. ACA and the Commission on Accreditation for Corrections develop national standards for corrections, perform facility audits and accredit corrections facilities.
Peter Greenwood Ph.D., President and Chief Executive Officer
Greenwood and Associates
1936 Flathead Trail
Agoura, CA 91301
818.889.0405; peter.greenwood@sbcglobal.net
Greenwood has published widely in the areas of violence prevention, juvenile justice, criminal careers, sentencing, corrections, law enforcement and cyber crime. He was the founder of RAND’s Criminal Justice Program and is a member of the Homicide Research Working Group and is a past president of the California Association of Criminal Justice Research.
Samuel Halperin, Founder and Senior Fellow
American Youth Policy Forum
1836 Jefferson Place, NW
Washington, DC 20036
202.775.9731; shalperin@aypf.org
Samuel Halperin is the founder of and a senior fellow at the American Youth Policy Forum in Washington, D.C. He has held leadership positions in academia, the federal government, a foundation and nonprofit organizations for over 40 years. Halperin has served as president of the Institute for Educational Leadership, deputy assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare, and Congressional Fellow of the American Political Science Association, where he worked on U.S. Senate and House of Representatives committees dealing with major education legislation. He has also served as study director of Youth and America’s Future: The William T. Grant Foundation Commission on Work, Family and Citizenship.
Nancy Gannon Hornberger, Executive Director
Coalition for Juvenile Justice
1211 Connecticut Ave., N.W.
Washington, DC 20036
202.467.0864, Ext. 111, nancy@juvjustice.org
CJJ is a coalition of juvenile justice state advisory groups, guiding elected officials on juvenile justice issues. Its Web site provides fact sheets, lists of state juvenile justice specialists and a glossary of relevant terms about young offenders, law enforcement and juvenile courts.
Mary Ellen Johnson, Executive Director
The Pendulum Foundation
2860 So. Circle Drive, #123
Colorado Springs, CO 80906
720.314.1402; maryellen@pendulumfoundation.com
The Pendulum Foundation's mission is to physically, emotionally and spiritually free all young people whose childhoods have been lost in Colorado’s prison system. Pendulum is dedicated to educating the public about the issue of children in adult prisons, and in transforming the lives of all those youthful offenders who are currently behind bars.
Denise Johnston M.D., Director
The Center for Children of Incarcerated Parents
65 S. Grand Ave.
Pasadena, CA 91105
626.449.2470; cciponline@yahoo.com
Denise Johnston, M.D., is the founding director of the Center for Children of Incarcerated Parents. Her expertise is in children of criminal offenders. The center has conducted more than 40 educational, family reunification and therapeutic projects serving children of criminal offenders, their parents and families. In 2002, Johnston will oversee the MIRACLE Project at Los Angeles County Jails, the second jail nursery to be established in the United States. She is currently adviser to the National Institute of Corrections’ Resource Center on Children of Prisoners. As principal investigator, Johnston has completed 12 major research projects for the center. Among those studies is the first longitudinal investigation of children of criminal offenders, begun in 1991 in Southeast Los Angeles County. She has been a founding board member of organizations serving women offenders, including: Phase ReEntry Programs; the National Network for Women in Prison; and Girls and Gangs in Los Angeles County. Johnston is the editor of the first American text on incarcerated parents and their children, which was published by Lexington Books in 1995. Johnston received her doctorate from Stanford University School of Medicine.
David Kass, Executive Director
Fight Crime: Invest In Kids
1212 New York Avenue, Suite 300
Washington, DC 20005
202.776.0027 ext. 119; dkass@fightcrime.org
Kass coordinates strategic planning and oversees day-to-day operations at Fight Crime: Invest in Kids. Previously, he served as deputy assistant secretary for legislation at the U.S. Department of Housing. Fight Crime: Invest in Kids is a national, bipartisan, nonprofit anti-crime organization of more than 3,000 police chiefs, sheriffs, prosecutors, other law enforcement leaders and violence survivors. The group informs the public and policymakers about relevant findings, and urges investment in programs proven effective by research.
Jack King, Director of Public Affairs and Communications
Public Affairs, National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL)
1150 18th St., NW, Suite 950
Washington, DC 20036
202.872.8600 Ext. 228; jack@nacdl.org
The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) is made up of criminal defense lawyers, public defenders, active U.S. military defense counsel, law professors and judges committed to preserving fairness within America's criminal justice system. King ia spokesman for NACDL.
Marsha Levick, Legal Director
Juvenile Law Center
The Philadelphia Building, 4th Floor
1315 Walnut St.
Philadelphia, PA 19107
215.625.0551; mlevick@jlc.org
Levick, an advocate for juvenile and women's rights, co-founded the center. She has represented children in delinquency and dependency proceedings and litigated challenges to conditions of confinement in juvenile institutions. She has worked to develop standards for prosecuting juveniles in the adult criminal justice system, and she's developing strategies to address girls' special needs in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems.
Bart Lubow, Director of Programs for High Risk Youth
Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative, Annie E. Casey Foundation (AECF)
701 St. Paul St.
Baltimore, MD 21202
410.547.3671; blubow@aecf.org
The Juvenile Detention Alternatives Initiative has been the flagship of AECF’s efforts to increase the odds that youth in the juvenile justice system make successful transitions to adulthood.
Daniel Macallair, Executive Director and Co-founder
Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
54 Dore St.
San Francisco, CA 94103
415.621.5661, ext. 310; dmacallair@cjcj.org
Macallair is the co-founder of the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice. His expertise is in the development and analysis of correctional policy for youth and adult offenders. He has implemented model programs throughout the country. His programs have received national recognition and were cited as exemplary models by the United States Department of Justice and Harvard University's Innovations in American Government program. He authored a 1999 study on youth curfew.
Mike Males Ph.D., Senior Researcher
Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
54 Dore St.
San Francisco, CA 94103
415.621.5661; mmales@earthlink.net
Males researches youth crime, drug abuse, pregnancy and economics. He is the author of “Kids & Guns: How Politicians, Experts and the Press Fabricate Fear of Youth” (Common Courage Press, 2001) and co-author of “California Youth Crime Declines: The Untold Story” (Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, 2006) and “Testing Incapacitation Theory: Youth Crime and Incarceration in California” (Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice, 2006) showing that massive declines in the imprisonment of California youth accompanied large declines in both serious and misdemeanor crime by youths of all races over the last three decades.
Karen Maline, Director of Member Services
Justice Research and Statistics Association (JRSA)
777 N. Capitol St. N.E., Suite 801
Washington, DC 20002
202.842.9330; kmaline@jrsa.org
JRSA conducts and publishes research on justice issues, provides training and technical assistance and maintains a clearinghouse of state criminal justice activities.
Scott Matson, Research Associate
Center for Sex Offender Management, Center for Effective Public Policy
8403 Colesville Road, Suite 720
Silver Spring, MD 20910
301.589.9383; smatson@cepp.com
CSOM supports state and local jurisdictions in the effective management of adult and juvenile sex offenders under community supervision. It is sponsored by the U.S. Department of Justice, in collaboration with the National Institute of Corrections, State Justice Institute and the American Probation and Parole Association.
Marc Mauer, Executive Director
The Sentencing Project
514 10th St. N.W., Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20004
202.628.0871; mauer@sentencingproject.org
The project promotes decreased reliance on incarceration and increased use of more effective and humane alternatives. It has helped establish alternative sentencing programs in more than 22 states and consulted on issues such as juvenile detention, racial disparity and the trial of juveniles in adult court.
Patrick McCarthy, President & Chief Executive Officer
Annie E. Casey Foundation
701 St. Paul St.
Baltimore, MD 21202
410.223.2852; media@aecf.org
McCarthy oversees the foundation's work in the areas of health, reproductive health, mental health, substance abuse, juvenile justice, education, early childhood, youth development, child welfare and income security.
Mary Mentaberry, Executive Director
National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges
1041 N. Virginia St.
P.O. Box 8970
Reno, NV 89507
775.784.6012 (main); mmentaberry@ncjfcj.org
Mentaberry, executive director since 2004, has worked for the council since 1969. The membership organization seeks to improve the standards, practices and effectiveness of the juvenile courts and other courts with jurisdiction over families and children. Its research division, the National Center for Juvenile Justice, features profiles of state juvenile justice systems here.
David Muhlhausen, Policy Analyst
Center for Data Analysis, Heritage Foundation
214 Massachusetts Ave., N.E..
Washington, DC 20002
202.608.6209; david.muhlhausen@heritage.org
Muhlhausen is an expert on criminal justice programs, particularly law enforcement grant programs administered by the U.S. Department of Justice. While a staff member of the U.S. Senate Committee on the Judiciary, he specialized in crime and juvenile justice policy. He has also served as a manager at a juvenile correctional facility in Baltimore.
Juan Sanchez Ph.D., President and CEO
Southwest Key Programs, Inc.
3000 S. IH-35, Suite 410
Austin, TX 78704
512.462.2181; jsanchez@swkey.org
Sánchez is a leader in the field of juvenile justice. He serves on the board of the National Council on Crime and Delinquency, as an associate with the Vera Institute of Justice, as technical assistance provider for the Annie E. Casey Foundation’s Juvenile Justice Alternative Initiative and as an appointee to the National Council of La Raza’s board of directors. Southwest Key Programs operates over 45 programs in seven states, including juvenile justice and family programs, safe shelters for immigrant children, alternative schools, youth empowerment and fatherhood programs, job creation initiatives, and child care brokerage services.
Robert Schwartz, Executive Director
Juvenile Law Center
The Philadelphia Building
1315 Walnut St., 4th Floor
Philadelphia, PA 19107
215.625.0551; rschwartz@jlc.org
JLC provides legal representation and services to children under the care of child welfare or juvenile justice systems, residential treatment facilities and adult prisons. A co-founder of the center, Schwartz has brought class-action litigation over institutional conditions and probation functions. He was chair of the American Bar Association's Juvenile Justice Committee from 1992 to 1998 and was a member of the MacArthur Foundation Research Network on Adolescent Development and Juvenile Justice.
Carole Shauffer, Executive Director
Youth Law Center
417 Montgomery St., Suite 900
San Francisco, CA 94104
415.543.3379; cshauffer@ylc.org
The center -- with offices in San Francisco and Washington, D.C. -- works nationally to ensure humane treatment of children in adult jails, juvenile detention facilities, state institutions and child welfare systems. It pushes for improvement through training, technical assistance, negotiation or, as a last resort, litigation. Shauffer has extensive experience in child welfare and juvenile justice reform. She has written about special education in juvenile institutions, coordination of services to children, the rights of gay youth and the reasonable efforts requirement.
Charisa Smith, Project Director
Juvenile Justice Project, Correctional Association of New York
135 E. 15th St.
New York, NY 10003
212.254.5700, Ext. 315
The project promotes a stronger emphasis on community-based prevention and alternatives to jail and prison. It advocates for fair and effective responses to youth crime; produces reports, position papers and fact sheets that analyze juvenile justice policies and explore alternatives; educates the public and legislators about juvenile justice issues; and trains young people to help transform juvenile justice policies in New York.
Mark Soler, Executive Director
Center for Children’s Law and Policy (CCLP)
1701 K St., NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20006
202.637.0377, Ext. 114; msoler@cclp.org
CCLP is a public interest law and policy organization focused on reform of juvenile justice and other systems that affect troubled and at-risk children, and protection of the rights of children in such systems.
Sara Totonchi, Public Policy Director
Southern Center for Human Rights
83 Poplar Street, N.W.
Atlanta, GA 30303-2122
404.688.1202; stotonchi@schr.org
The Southern Center for Human Rights is a nonprofit, public interest law firm dedicated to enforcing the civil and human rights of people in the criminal justice system in the South. The center’s legal work includes representing prisoners in challenges to unconstitutional conditions and practices in prisons and jails; challenging systemic failures in the legal representation of poor people in the criminal courts; and representing people facing the death penalty who otherwise would have no representation. Totonchi represents the center in the Georgia legislature, acts as a liaison between media outlets and the center, and co-staffs Fairness for Prisoners' Families.
John Tuell, Division Director
Juvenile Justice Division
Child Welfare League of America
440 First St. N.W., Third Floor
Washington, DC 20001
202.638.2952; jtuell@cwla.org
The division works with member agencies to reduce reliance on incarceration for accused or adjudicated delinquent youth. It helps to develop community-based alternatives that promote positive youth development while ensuring protection of the public safety.
Tracy Velázquez, Executive Director
Justice Policy Institute
1003 K Street NW
Suite 500
Washington, DC 20001
202-558-7974 ext. 311; tracy@justicepolicy.org
JPI is a research and public policy organization working to end society's reliance on incarceration. In July 2007 JPI released the study, "Gang Wars: The Failure of Enforcement Tactics and the Need for Effective Public Safety Strategies."
Gail Wasserman M.D., Director
Center for the Promotion of Mental Health in Juvenile Justice (CPMHJJ)
Columbia University
1051 Riverside Dr., Unit 74
New York, NY 10032
212.543.5298; WassermG@childpsych.columbia.edu
CPMHJJ assists juvenile justice facilities and local communities in establishing and maintaining effective diagnostic procedures for identifying mental health problems among youth in contact with the justice system.
James Backstrom, County Attorney
Dakota County, Minn.
1560 Highway 55
Hastings, MN 55033
651.438.4438; attorney@co.dakota.mn.us
Backstrom has been the Dakota County (Minn.) Attorney since 1987. He previously served as an assistant county attorney for nine years, including five years when he headed the office’s civil division. He is a member of the board of directors of the National District Attorneys Association and served as its vice president from1997 to 2000. Backstrom co-chaired the association’s Juvenile Justice Committee from 1994 to 2001. He is also a past president and board member of the Minnesota County Attorneys Association. In addition to his administrative duties, he has helped prosecute a number of important criminal cases, and in 1998 successfully argued a case before the U.S. Supreme Court. Backstrom has been active in passing legislation aimed at improving Minnesota’s criminal justice system, and his office has established several programs dealing with crime prevention, juvenile crime and victim services. A frequent speaker at legal education forums and author of numerous articles and training materials, Backstrom was named by Minnesota Lawyer as one of the state’s top 12 attorneys in 2002. He earned a bachelor’s degree in economics and political science from the University of Minnesota and a law degree from William Mitchell College of Law in St. Paul.
Michael Courlander, Director of Public Affairs
U.S. Sentencing Commission (USSC)
One Columbus Circle N.E.
Washington, DC 20002
202.502.4590; pubaffairs@ussc.gov
The USSC establishes sentencing policies and practices for federal courts; advises Congress and the executive branch in the development of crime policy; and collects, analyzes and distributes information on federal crime and sentencing issues.
Kathi Grasso, Senior Juvenile Justice Policy and Legal Advisor
Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP)
U.S. Department of Justice
810 Seventh St., N.W.
Washington, DC 20531
202.616.7567; kathi.grasso@usdoj.gov
OJJDP provides data on juvenile crime, delinquency prevention and violence and victimization. Its online Statistical Briefing Book and Juvenile Facts and Figures web site offer direct access to statistics and trends in juvenile justice and victimization.
Jerrauld Jones, Chief Judge
Norfolk Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court
800 E. City Hall Ave.
Richmond, VA 23510
757.664.7340
Jones is nationally recognized as a leader in the movement for juvenile detention reform, and advocates for more academic and social programs to thwart juvenile delinquency. Prior to serving as a judge, Jones was appointed Director of the Department of Juvenile Justice for the Commonwealth of Virginia. As head of the youth authority, Jones was responsible for the incarceration, rehabilitation, and transitional reentry of juvenile offenders in the state.
Cindy Lederman, Presiding Judge
Miami-Dade Juvenile Court, 11th Judicial Circuit-State of Florida
3300 N.W. 27th Ave.
Miami, FL 33142
305.638.6087; clederman@jud11.flcourts.org
Lederman has been presiding judge since 1999. Earlier, she served as first administrative judge of the Dade County Domestic Violence Court, which she helped establish. Lederman is known for using scientific research to guide custody decisions. From 1997 to 2003, her courtroom served as the base for a national demonstration project to curb family violence. The intervention program provided intensive services to both young children and their mothers to develop strong parent-child bonds. Lederman serves on the American Academy of Pediatrics task force on foster care and the National Council of Juvenile and Family Court Judges' board of trustees.
James Payne, Director
Indiana Department of Child Services
2451 N. Keystone Ave.
Indianapolis, IN 46218
317.924.7501, Ext. 502; jpayne@indygov.org
Payne, a former judge, was responsible for the development of a nationally recognized detention center, case management software for juvenile justice and many award-winning programs. He speaks frequently around the country on issues of delinquency, dependency, case management and juvenile justice practice and policy, and has served on many boards and executive committees developing juvenile court policy both in Indiana and throughout the country.
Peter Reinharz, Managing Attorney
Nassau County Attorney's Office
1 West St.
Mineola, NY 11501
516.571.3000; peter.reinharz@mail.co.nassau.ny.us
Reinharz is managing attorney in the Nassau County (N.Y.) Attorney’s Office, where his responsibilities include oversight of family court. From 1987 to 2002, Reinharz was New York City’s chief juvenile prosecutor, as chief of the family court division of the New York City Law Department. During that time, he drafted and lobbied for legislation in the fields of criminal law and family law; he also wrote “Killer Kids, Bad Law: Tales of the Juvenile Justice System,” (Barricade Books, 1996). Previously, Reinharz was a deputy division chief for the city’s law department and a borough chief and staff attorney for the family court division of the New York County Corporation Counsel’s office. Since 1996, under appointment by Gov. George Pataki, Reinharz has served on the state’s juvenile justice advisory group. He has been a television commentator on juvenile crime. He has testified before Congress and published numerous articles on youth crime, violence and juvenile justice reform. He is a contributing editor of the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal, where he writes on subjects including criminal and juvenile justice.
Vincent Schiraldi MSW, Commissioner
Department of Probation
33 Beaver Street
New York, NY 10004
212.361.8957; vschiraldi@aol.com
Schiraldi founded the Justice Policy Institute and the Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice. Before he was appointed as Commissioner of the Department of Probation, he served as the director of DYRS, whose mission is to improve public safety and give court-involved youths the opportunity to become more productive citizens through community-based services such as mentoring, home-based counseling, individual counseling, after-school enrichment and substance abuse programs.
Ann Stahl, Manager of Data Collection
National Juvenile Court Data Archive (NJCDA), National Center for Juvenile Justice
710 Fifth Ave.
Pittsburgh, PA 15219
412.227.6950; njcda@ncjj.org
The National Juvenile Court Data Archive houses the automated records of cases handled by courts with juvenile jurisdiction. The Archive was established by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention, within the U.S. Department of Justice, to promote access to automated juvenile court data sets for juvenile justice research and policymaking efforts. This web site was developed to inform researchers about the available data sets and the procedures for use and access.
Andrea Williams, ReConnect Program Coordinator
Women in Prison Project, Correctional Association of New York
135 East 15th St.
New York, NY 10003
212.254.5700, Ext. 311; awilliams@correctionalassociation.org
Williams will help connect journalists to former women inmates in New York and elsewhere. The Women in Prison Project addresses the effects of New York’s criminal justice policies on women and their families. It is the only project with the authority to visit female correctional facilities to monitor conditions of confinement.