Cracking the Code? Schools, Neighborhoods, Peers, Individual Propensity, and the Conditioning Effect of Race and Gender on Code of the Street Adherence
Cracking the Code? Schools, Neighborhoods, Peers, Individual Propensity, and the Conditioning Effect of Race and Gender on Code of the Street Adherence
Jacob H. EricksonAlexandra SlemakerKyle A. Burgasona University of Nevada, Las Vegas, USAb Iowa State University, Ames, USAJacob H. Erickson is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. His scholarship is focused on deviant identity and decision-making processes, specifically as they related to drug and violent crime involvement. He uses qualitative and quantitative methods in his research and is the 2022 MacNamara Award winner from the ACJS.Alexandra Slemaker is an assistant professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Her research uses qualitative and quantitative methodologies to examine mass murder, specifically how psychological/psychiatric, ideological, and motivational factors influence mass shootings and domestic terrorism.Kyle A. Burgason is an associate professor in the Department of Sociology and Criminal Justice at Iowa State University. His research interests are rooted in policing, the intersection of race and crime, and structural and cultural contexts of violent crime.