Jacqueline Johnson
Associate Professor and Department Chair
Sociology
Adelphi University
United States of America
Biography
Jacqueline Johnson completed Ph.D., Sociology, North Carolina State University (1997) M.S., Sociology, North Carolina State University (1994) M.F.A. Environmental Design, East Carolina University (1986).Leadership: Chair, Committee on the Status of Minorities, Eastern Sociological Society (2007-2015 Professional Organizations: Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, 2013-present American Criminological Association, 2011-present American Sociological Association, 1995- present Eastern Sociological Society, 2001-present International Sociological Association, 2011-present Racial Democracy, Crime, and Justice Network, 2008-present.
Research Interest
Illegal cigarette markets Residential segregation and homicide Causes and consequences of mass incarceration in the U.S. Structures of race and racialization in the U.S.
Publications
-
Johnson, Jacqueline (1998). Finding Myself Among the Long-Haired Women: Reflections on Gender, Race, Sexuality, and Feminist Identity. In Myers, Kristen A., Cynthia D. Anderson and Barbara J. Risman (Eds.). Feminist Foundations. (pp. 397-402). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
-
Johnson, Kecia R. and Jacqueline Johnson (2012). Racial Disadvantage and Incarceration: Sources of Wage Inequality among African American, Latino, and White Men. In John Betancur and Cedric Herring (Eds.). Reinventing Race, Reinventing Racism. (pp. Forthcoming). Leiden, Netherlands: Brill Academic.
-
Klaus von Lampe, Marin Kurti, and Jacqueline Johnson (2015). The Link Between Poverty and Crime: Views from Consumers in the Cigarette Black Market in the South Bronx. In Petrus C. van Duyne, Almir Maljevic, Georgios A. Antonopoulos, Jackie Harvey, and Klaus von Lampe (Eds.). The Relativity of Wrongdoing: Corruption, Organized Crime, Fraud and Money Laundering in Perspective. (pp. 213-228). Oisterwijk, Netherlands: Wolf Legal Publishers.