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Sociocultural artifacts as data in Criminology and Criminal Justice (CCJ): using the trustworthiness framework to map a path toward transparent, methodologically and analytically sound qualitative artifact collection and analysis (QACA)

Kevin Buckler Elizabeth L. Gilmore Criminal Justice and Social Work Department, University of Houston-Downtown, Houston, TX, USAKevin Buckler is a Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Houston-Downtown. He earned a Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from the University of Cincinnati. He teaches Statistics, Qualitative and Interpretive Methods, Constitutional Law and Policing, and Criminal Courts. His research interests include mass media and crime, trial and appellate courts, and applying qualitative techniques to criminal justice research.Elizabeth L. Gilmore is an Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice at the University of Houston-Downtown, where she also serves as Director of Internship and Career Services. She holds a doctoral degree in Juvenile Justice from Prairie View A & M University. Her teaching specialties include Death Investigations, Child Abuse and Neglect, Criminal Investigations, and Testimonial Evidence. Elizabeth’s research interests include criminal justice professionals’ behavioral and adaptive responses to working in the justice system, mass media, and crime, as well as applying qualitative methods to criminal justice research.

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