CRIMINAL JUSTICE
Bachelor of Science Minor available in this area of study.
FACULTY
EMMANUELLE KLOSSOU, Assistant Professor, Criminal Justice; B. A., Hartwick College; M. S., Ph. D., Northeastern University
RICHARD HUBERFELD, Lecturer, Criminal Justice; B. A., M. A., Brooklyn College
GEETHA SURESH, Associate Professor, Criminal Justice; B. A., M. A., Madras University, India; M. P. H., Bharathiar University, India; Ph. D., University of Louisville
KATIE L. SWOPE, Assistant Professor, Criminal Justice; B. A., Slippery Rock University of Pennsylvania; M. A., Ph. D., Indiana University of Pennsylvania
The criminal justice program at Stevenson is committed to education, research, and public service. Students benefit from a state-of-the-art education focused on a comprehensive and critical understanding of the criminal justice system and the society in which it functions. Students examine the broad questions of how justice is administered in American society and globally as well as confront the fundamental issues of criminal justice.
Within the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, faculty members prepare students for criminal justice careers or post-graduate work. The faculty advances research in teaching, assessment, and the knowledge base of the field of criminal justice as well as policy implications. Faculty expertise also assists criminal justice and social service agencies in the greater metropolitan Baltimore area in applied research, policy development, training, and planned change to meet the social and technological challenges of the 21st century.
The B. S. to M. S. option is available for criminal justice majors who wish to combine their bachelor’ s coursework with work toward a master’ s degree in one of Stevenson’ s graduate programs. See stevenson. edu to learn more.
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