Sandra Bucerius

811 posts

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Sandra Bucerius

Sandra Bucerius

@SBucerius

H.M Tory Chair Sociologist/Criminologist UAlberta Director Centre for Criminological Research & the University of Alberta Prison Project @theUAPP. Ethnographer.

Edmonton, Alberta Katılım Kasım 2018
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Sandra Bucerius retweetledi
Sociology Journal
Sociology Journal@sociologyjnl·
Aryan Karimi, Sara Thompson, and @SBucerius argue that refugee background seems to push transnationalism into the future for their study's participants. Read their article below. doi.org/10.1177/003803…
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Daniel Konikoff
Daniel Konikoff@DanielKonikoff·
Thrilled to announce that I will be starting as an Assistant Professor at @UAlberta’s Department of Sociology @UAlbertaSoc! I can’t wait to expand my research and teaching at the intersection of criminal justice and technology!
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Sergio Grossi
Sergio Grossi@grossisergio45·
🎓 Exciting Career Update - New Position as Assistant Professor (Tenure Track) in Criminology at City University of New York 🎓 📚 I am thrilled to announce that starting at the end of August 2024, I will join the John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York (CUNY) as an Assistant Professor (tenure track) in Criminology within the Sociology Department! In this new role, I will continue to focus on best practices in the education and reintegration of incarcerated individuals (tinyurl.com/SUDEDUPRISON). 📚 As I look ahead, I am excited about the potential for future collaborations. I invite scholars, practitioners, and students to connect and explore opportunities to think and work together. 📚 This milestone was not achieved alone. I owe a huge thank you to many who have supported and guided me through this journey. Special thanks to Fergus McNeill @fergus_mcneill , Shadd Maruna @criminology , and Alessio Surian for their invaluable letters of recommendation, and to the Sociology Department and everyone involved in the interview process at John Jay for your warm welcome and engaging discussions, which assured me that this is the right place to continue my career. 📚 Additional heartfelt thanks go to my colleagues at Sorbonne Paris 1 and Universidad Complutense de Madrid, as well as to the Marie Curie funds, which have been fundamental in supporting my research over the past few years. A profound thank you is also due to the Institute of Criminology at Cambridge and the Center for the Study of Violence (NEV-USP) at the University of São Paulo for providing spaces for debate and offering crucial insights that will shape the next steps in my career. 📚 Special thanks also go to the other universities that have enriched my research and fueled my passion, including the University of Padova, UFF in Rio de Janeiro, the University of Bologna, and Université Paris Nanterre. 📚 Another heartfelt thank you to all the individuals I have met in prison or post-incarceration, their families, friends, and the staff who strive to transform the penal system under challenging conditions. 📚 Another special thanks to all my friends—both those who conduct research at the university and those who seek meaning and transformation in everyday life. Even across distances, we are a community permanently engaged in research, and I adore you all. 📚 A final thank you to my family, who, despite not having had the opportunity to pursue higher education themselves, have always been a profound presence in my heart. Their unwavering support has been crucial in helping me navigate the uncertainties of the contemporary academic world up to this further milestone. 🌍🤝 I can't wait to personally thank each of you for your incredible support! I'm looking forward to seeing you all soon! 🌍🤝
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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
@SJacques83 @HeCopes @VolkanTopalli How about speaking after the weekend on zoom? But re your questions 1) we need to balance "openness" with protecting vulnerable, "justice" -involved participants. That's the type of research/concerns we are addressing. 2) see point 1.
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Scott(ie) Jacques
Scott(ie) Jacques@SJacques83·
Thank you for the engagement. Yes, I know The Criminologist article is about data not papers. (Sorry it was unclear.) Having quickly reread your article and now to confirm: 1. Your article’s “solutions” are to require less openness? (E.g., NSF policy.) 2. Your article presents no solutions that would maintain or increase openness (per the CRIM policy)?
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Sandra Bucerius retweetledi
Heith Copes
Heith Copes@HeCopes·
I hope this gets the conversation started about the practical and ethical issues with making transcripts and other qualitative data public. The editors of Criminology @VolkanTopalli seem open to discuss. Would live to hear other people's thoughts on it. #Criminology #qualcrim
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius

Pleased that The Criminologist published @HeCopes & my article on the "Transparency trade-off: the risks of Criminology’s new data sharing policy". As board members of #Criminology we felt it was important to discuss possible implications for qualitative researchers &participants

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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
@SJacques83 @HeCopes @VolkanTopalli ...this would pose issues around Indigenous sovereignty and Truth and Reconciliation efforts. Again, solutions can be to make coding trees available (not entire interview scripts/fieldnotes). OA is important but cannot supersede protecting participants! Hope this calrifies (3/3)
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Scott(ie) Jacques
Scott(ie) Jacques@SJacques83·
To be clearer by my unclear use of the word “correction”… The article will have a negative effect on the future of qualitative criminology, and I’d like y’all to reduce this with a “correction”: something public that balances the article. I know your wrote the article to solve what you see as a problem with the new policy. I support your general concerns. But based on the info I have, y’all didn’t investigate whether/how to solve those problems other than opting-out. The tone of the article is “Qual people shouldn’t do open.” People will use it to not advance open access in reasonable ways. The article is focused on problems. Long known problems. And problems that need to be solved. Without trying to solve the problems, we can’t be sure of reasonable exceptions. The article doesn’t address existing solutions. It doesn’t call on us to try to find solutions. So by “correction,” I would like leaders like you to make clear that we need to figure out solutions to provide open access. After, we can figure out where closed access is needed. Apologies for my lack of clarity. I’m sure it’s ample.
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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
@SJacques83 @HeCopes @VolkanTopalli to protect participants who are marginalized/criminally involved etc. We tried to offer solutions at the end of the piece and have also consulted NIJ on the topic. We also see issues around making ALL data available when it comes to Indigenous groups, for example. In Canada (2/3)
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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
@SJacques83 @HeCopes @VolkanTopalli Thanks for the clarification. We did not mean to say that papers should not be open access (in fact, I try to make mine OA). In the article, we spoke specifically about the issues of making entire interview scripts/fieldnotes publicly available - especially when having....(1/3)
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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
Happy about how this one turned out - fun to co-author with @UrbanikMarta on women in gang research! Thank you for including us in this new OUP Handbook of Gangs and Society @dpyrooz @JohnLeverso & James Densley. @CrimWomenKnow @CCR_UofA @UofAResearch @UAlbertaSoc @SSHRC_CRSH
Marta-Marika Urbanik@UrbanikMarta

A little late to the party but thanks to ⁦@dpyrooz⁩ ⁦@JohnLeverso⁩ & James Densley for including this chapter with ⁦@SBucerius⁩ in their new Oxford Handbook of Gangs & Society - a hefty but important book ⁦@CCR_UofA

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Sandra Bucerius
Sandra Bucerius@SBucerius·
Pleased that The Criminologist published @HeCopes & my article on the "Transparency trade-off: the risks of Criminology’s new data sharing policy". As board members of #Criminology we felt it was important to discuss possible implications for qualitative researchers &participants
Amer Soc of Crim@ASCRM41

The current issue of The Criminologist has been published and is available for you to view online. Please use the following link to access issues of The Criminologist: asc41.org/publications/t…

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