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Emily M. Wright

Researcher at University of Nebraska Omaha

Publications -  89
Citations -  8329

Emily M. Wright is an academic researcher from University of Nebraska Omaha. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Domestic violence. The author has an hindex of 25, co-authored 81 publications receiving 6804 citations. Previous affiliations of Emily M. Wright include Harvard University & University of Cincinnati.

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Estimating the reproducibility of psychological science

Alexander A. Aarts, +290 more
- 28 Aug 2015 - 
TL;DR: A large-scale assessment suggests that experimental reproducibility in psychology leaves a lot to be desired, and correlational tests suggest that replication success was better predicted by the strength of original evidence than by characteristics of the original and replication teams.
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Women’s Risk Factors and Their Contributions to Existing Risk/Needs Assessment: The Current Status of a Gender-Responsive Supplement

TL;DR: In this paper, a series of gender-responsive assessment models were tested for their contributions to widely used gender-neutral risk needs assessments, and subsets of the genderresponsive scales achieved statistically significant contributions to gender neutral models, including parental stress, family support, self-efficacy, educational assets, housing safety, anger/hostility, and current mental health factors.
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Gender-Responsive Lessons Learned and Policy Implications for Women in Prison A Review

TL;DR: Findings suggest that prisons provide treatment and programming services aimed at reducing women’s criminogenic need factors, use gendered assessments to place women into appropriate interventions and to appropriately plan for women's successful reentry into the community, and train staff members to be gender responsive.
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The impact of neighborhoods on intimate partner violence and victimization.

TL;DR: This review focuses on the effects of neighborhoods and macro-level context on violence between intimate partners, specifically identifying empirical studies that have examined contextual predictors of IPV utilizing the major tenets of social disorganization theory.
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Predicting the Prison Misconducts of Women Offenders: The Importance of Gender-Responsive Needs

TL;DR: The needs of women offenders may be qualitatively different than the needs of male offenders as discussed by the authors, and the "pathways" and "gender-responsive" perspectives of female offending have recently garnered attentio...