Differential treatment by citizenship within European criminal justice systems
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Differential treatment by citizenship within European criminal justice systems
Suman Kakar Mario Coccia Ellen G. Cohn a Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Fellow of the Honors College, Center for Women’s and Gender Studies, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USAb Research in social sciences at the CNR – National Research Council of Italy, IRCRES-CNR, Turin Research Area of the National Research Council, Turin, Italyc Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Affiliate Faculty Center for Women’s and Gender Studies, Florida International University, Miami, FL, USASuman Kakar is an Associate Professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Florida International University in Miami, FL. Her research interests focus on immigration, race relations, human trafficking, violence within families and schools, youth gangs, criminal justice education, and crime prevention program evaluation.Mario Coccia is a social scientist at the National Research Council of Italy as research director and at the Arizona State University (USA) as visiting scholar. He has been research scholar at the Max Planck Institute of Economics and visiting professor at the Polytechnics of Torino and University of Piemonte Orientale (Italy). He has developed scientific research at the Georgia Institute of Technology, Yale University, UNU-Maastricht Economic and Social Research Institute on Innovation and Technology (United Nations University-MERIT), RAND Corporation (Washington D.C.), University of Maryland (College Park), Bureau d’Économie Théorique et Appliquée (Strasbourg, France), Munk School of Global Affairs (University of Toronto, Canada), and Institute for Science and Technology Studies (University of Bielefeld, Germany). He investigates, by using statistical analyses, models, doing experiments, and conducting observational studies with interdisciplinary scientific perspective in order to explain the evolutionary properties of society, science and technology. He is in the Editorial Board of manifold international journals and his research publications include more than three hundred fifty international papers in several disciplines.Ellen G. Cohn is an associate professor in the Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology at Florida International University. Her research interests focus on immigration, the influence of weather on crime, intimate partner violence, and scholarly influence in criminology.