Joanne Belknap
- Professor Emerita
- CRITICAL AND INTERSECTIONAL CRIMINOLOGY & SOCIAL JUSTICE
Pronouns: she / her / hers
Education
Ph.D., Michigan State University - Criminal Justice, 1986
M.A., Michigan State University - Criminal Justice, 1983
B.A., 麻豆影院 - Political Science, 1981
Research Interests
Intimate partner abuse, sexual victimization, incarceration of women and children, criminal legal policy, feminist and intersectional criminology, jail-to-community reentry, and teaching college classes in prisons
Joanne Belknap received a Ph.D. in Criminal Justice from Michigan State University in 1986. She is a Professor of Ethnic Studies at the University of Colorado and Past-President of the American Society of Criminology. She is also an adjunct professor on the faculty of law at Queensland University of Technology, School of Justice, in Brisbane Australia. Her research is primarily on gender-based abuse and the trajectory of trauma to offending among women and youth, the intersections of marginalization and oppression, and social justice. Dr. Belknap is working on the fifth edition of her book, The Invisible Woman: Gender, Crime, and Justice (under contract with Sage). She has secured almost two million dollars in research grant money, has served on state advisory boards for female offenders and women in prison, on U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno's Violence Against Women Committee, gave expert testimony to the Warren Christopher Commission investigating the Rodney King police brutality incident in Los Angeles, and served as a pro bono advisor on criminal justice policy for the Obama presidential campaign. Dr. Belknap has won numerous research, teaching and service awards, most recently being honored as a Fellow of the American Society of Criminology. Her most recent research work includes jail-to-community reentry and implementing college courses in prisons (following her training by Temple University鈥檚 ).
Selected Publications
Book
Belknap, Joanne. 2020. . Los Angeles, CA. Sage Publications. (Previous Editions: 2007, 2001, 1996, 2015.)
Refereed Articles
Belknap, Joanne & Deanne Grant. 2018. Fifty Years After the 1967 Crime Commission Report: How Non-Policing Domestic Violence Research and Policies Have Changed and Expanded. Crime & Public Policy,17(2):467-481.
Belknap, Joanne. 2015. Activist Criminology: Criminologists鈥 Responsibility to Advocate for Social and Legal Justice. Criminology, 52(1):1-22. To read click
Lynch, Shannon, Dana DeHart, Joanne Belknap, Bonnie Green, Priscilla Dass-Brailsford, Kristine Johnson, & Wong, M.M. 2017. An Examination of the Associations among Victimization, Mental Health, and Offending in Women. Criminal Justice & Behavior, 44(6):796-814.
Joanne Belknap, Shannon Lynch, and Dana DeHart. 2015. Jail Staff Members鈥 Views on Jailed Women鈥檚 Mental Health, Trauma, Offending, Rehabilitation, and Reentry. Prison Journal, 96(1):79-101.
DePrince, Anne, Susan E. Buckingham & Joanne Belknap. 2014. The Geography of Intimate Partner Abuse Experiences and Clinical Responses. 2014. Clinical Psychological Science, 2(3):258-271.
Belknap, Joanne, Kristi Holsinger & Jani Little. 2012. Sexual Minority Status, Abuse, and Self-Harming Behaviors among Incarcerated Girls. Journal of Child & Adolescent Trauma, 5(2):173-185.
McDaniels-Wilson, Cathy, & Joanne Belknap. 2008. The Extensive Sexual Violation and Sexual Abuse Histories of Incarcerated Women. Violence Against Women, 14(10):1090-1127. (Winner of the Sage Best Article of 2008 in Violence Against Women).
Contributions to Edited Collections
Eigenberg, Helen, Stephanie Bonnes, & Joanne Belknap. 鈥淢anaging the Backlash,鈥 in Catherine Kaukinen, Michelle Hughes Miller, & R谩chael Powers (Eds.) Addressing Violence Against Women on College Campuses. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, pp. 285-303.
Belknap, Joanne, & Molly Bowers. 2016. 鈥淕irls and Women in Gangs,鈥 in Carlos Cuevas & Callie Marie Rennison (Eds.) Handbook on the Psychology of Violence. New York: Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 211-25.
Professional Associations
Critical Ethnic Studies Association
American Society of Criminology