
Georgia Moberg (left) and Lucille Lewis, senior criminology majors, presented their original research titled, “Do You Feel Safe?: Perceptions of Crime Patterns and Levels of Safety Among College Students.”
Many faculty and students presented their research at the American Society of Criminology (ASC) Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., on Nov. 12-15.
Presentations included "Gender, Justice, and Funding: Exploring Support for Prison Programming and Reentry Initiatives," "How Much Lifetime is Lost Due to Homicides: A Cross-National Comparison," "Role of Cyber Abuse and its Connection to Commercial Sexual Exploitation of Children Experiences," and .

Roberta O'Malley with her Early Career Researcher Award from the ASC Division of Cybercrime.
Roberta O’Malley, PhD, an assistant professor in the Department of Criminology, received the Early Career Researcher Award from the ASC Division of Cybercrime.
ASC is an international organization whose members pursue scholarly, scientific, and professional knowledge concerning the measurement, etiology, consequences, prevention, control, and treatment of crime and delinquency.
The society’s objectives are to encourage multidisciplinary exchange among those engaged in research, teaching, and practice; to foster criminological scholarship; and to serve as a forum for the dissemination of criminological knowledge. Membership includes students, practitioners, and academicians in criminal justice and criminology.
the full program of all faculty and student presentations.
