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Francis T. Cullen

Researcher at University of Cincinnati

Publications -  398
Citations -  36312

Francis T. Cullen is an academic researcher from University of Cincinnati. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Juvenile delinquency. The author has an hindex of 87, co-authored 385 publications receiving 33663 citations. Previous affiliations of Francis T. Cullen include Columbia University & Western Illinois University.

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Racial–ethnic intolerance and support for capital punishment: a cross‐national comparison*

TL;DR: This paper found that people were significantly more likely to express support for capital punishment if they were racially or ethnically intolerant while controlling for other covariates of public opinion, which indicated that the link between support for death penalty and racial and ethnic animus may occur universally in countries with conflicted racial-ethnic relations.
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Liberal but Not Stupid: Meeting the Promise of Downsizing Prisons

TL;DR: In this context, reducing America's prisons has materialized as a viable possibility as discussed by the authors, and the issue of downsizing will also remain at the forefront of correctional discourse because of the court-ordered reduction in imprisonment in California.
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Racial Discrimination and Hirschi's Criminological Classic: A Chapter in the Sociology of Knowledge

TL;DR: In this article, a reanalysis of the Richmond Youth Project data used in his classic study reveals that perceived racial discrimination is a robust predictor of delinquent involvement, which suggests that Hirschi missed a historic opportunity to focus the attention of a generation of criminologists on how the unique experiences of African Americans may shape their criminality.
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A Life-Course Analysis of Military Service in Vietnam

TL;DR: The authors examined the impact of military service in Vietnam on drug use and arrests across the life-course through latent growth curve models and found that lower-class youths with already established delinquent patterns were significantly more likely to have served in Vietnam.