Does Educating Students Influence Their Views About a Sensational Criminal Justice Event? An Experiment on the Chokehold Death of Mr. Eric Garner
Does Educating Students Influence Their Views About a Sensational Criminal Justice Event? An Experiment on the Chokehold Death of Mr. Eric Garner
John A. Eterno Arvind Verma a Department of Criminal Justice and Legal Studies, Molloy University, Rockville Centre, NY 11570, USAb Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Indiana University, Bloomington, USAJohn A. Eterno, Ph.D., is Professor and Chair of Criminal Justice and Legal Studies at Molloy University in New York. Dr. Eterno is also a retired captain for the New York City police. He has conducted research for various entities such as the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation, the United States Attorney’s office for the Eastern District of New York, and National Development Research Institutes. Dr. Eterno is recognized and testified as an expert on police in various court cases. Dr. Eterno is a representative to the United Nations for the International Police Executive Symposium and served as Managing Editor for their journal Police Practice and Research. His recent books include The Crime Numbers Game: Management by Manipulation (with Eli B. Silverman), The Detective’s Handbook (with Cliff Roberson), The New York City Police Department: The Impact of Its Policies and Practices, and How Countries Count Crime (with Arvind Verma and Eli Silverman). His peer‑reviewed journal publications have appeared in various outlets such as Justice Quarterly, Public Administration Review, The International Journal of Police Science and management, and many others. Among many other publications, he has penned op‑eds in The New York Times, The Atlantic, and The Guardian.Arvind Verma served as IPS officer in Bihar. He is now Prof Criminal Justice at Indiana University. He has served as the Managing Editor of Police Practice and Research: An International Journal and he has also been an advisor to the Bureau of Police Research and Development in India. His current research interests are in Policing; Criminal Justice Issues, Indian Police, CJUS Data Analytics. His recent publications include‑ books “She must not Die” {Thompson Reuter}; “‘Police Leaders as Thinkers’, {Springer}; “Counting Crime: An Exercise in Police Discretion” {Routledge}; Combating Corruption in India {Cambridge Univ. Press} and Journal articles, “Process Oriented Intervention for Citizen‑Friendly and Accountable Policing”; “The Sociological conception of Corruption: A case study of Karnataka Lokayukt”. Some recent chapters in edited books are: “Coercive Instruments of the State’, In Oxford Handbook of Indian Politics and “Thinking Police Leader in India: Case Study of Dr. Pradnya Sarvade, IPS”, In Police Leaders as Thinkers, {Springer}. He is affiliated with Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur and has established a Center for Criminal Justice Research https://ccjr.cse.iitk.ac.in/ to promote research in Indian police.