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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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Journal Article
Is Project HOPE Creating a False Sense of Hope? A Case Study in Correctional Popularity/Response to Stephanie A. Duriez, Francis T. Cullen, and Sarah M. Manchak: Theory and Evidence on the Swift-Certain-Fair Approach to Enforcing Conditions of Community Supervision/Before Adopting Project HOPE, Read the Warning Label: A Rejoinder to Kleiman, Kilmer, and Fisher's Comment
Stephanie A. Duriez,Francis T. Cullen,Sarah M. Manchak,Mark A. R. Kleiman,Beau Kilmer,Daniel T. Fisher +5 more
BookDOI
Corporate Crime Under Attack : The Fight to Criminalize Business Violence
TL;DR: In this article, the authors use the landmark "Ford Pinto case" as a centerpiece for exploring corporate violence and the long effort to bring such harm within the reach of the criminal law.
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District attorneys and corporate crime: surveying the prosecutorial gatekeepers
TL;DR: A survey of California district attorneys regarding corporate crime focused on the recent experiences of the prosecutors with such crimes and on factors that limit the likelihood of their prosecuting corporate offenders as discussed by the authors, finding that a significant majority of the district attorneys had prosecuted a variety of corporate crimes, and a sizable minority anticipated devoting more resources to corporate crime prosecutions in the future.
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Why Longitudinal Research Is Hurting Criminology
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Choosing Our Criminological Future: Reservations About Human Agency as an Organizing Concept
TL;DR: The authors argues that human agency should not be embraced as criminology's single background assumption or be its organizing concept, and argues that the focus on causality cannot be avoided if the criminological enterprise is to be scientific, to take seriously developmental processes across the life course, and to be the basis for progressive interventions.