Web Site: http://sociology.camden.rutgers.edu
Major requirements in sociology and criminal justice can be completed only through daytime attendance.
Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice
Chairperson: Robert E. Wood
Professors:
Myra Bluebond-Langner, B.A., Temple; M.A., Ph.D., Illinois
Ted George Goertzel, B.A., Antioch; M.A., Ph.D., Washington
Drew Humphries, B.A., M.Criminology, D.Criminology, California (Berkeley)
Robert E. Wood, B.A., Harvard; M.A., Ph.D., California (Berkeley)
Associate Professors:
Sheila Cosminsky, B.A., CUNY (Brooklyn College); M.A., Washington State; Ph.D., Brandeis
Katrina Hazzard-Donald, A.B., Wilberforce; M.A., Ph.D., Cornell
Jon`a F. Meyer, B.A., B.S., California State (Dominguez Hills); M.A., Ph.D., California (Irvine)
Assistant Professors:
Gail Caputo, B.S., M.A., Ph.D., Rutgers (Newark)
Cati Coe, B.A., Wesleyan; M.A., Ph.D., Pennsylvania
Michelle Meloy, B.A., Indiana; M.A., Northern Illinois; Ph.D., Delaware
Jane A. Siegel, B.A., Drew; M.S., Ph.D., Pennsylvania
The Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice offers
two majors, one in sociology and one in criminal justice. The
department also offers minors in all three subjects. Each of these
programs is designed to draw on the combined strengths of sociology,
anthropology, and criminology in fostering a broad awareness of the
nature and functioning of human societies and of the ways in which such
knowledge can be put to use. The sociology major is the broader of the
two available majors, allowing students substantial latitude in putting
together a program of courses from all three fields. Sociology
graduates typically go on to a wide range of careers in social
services, education, and business, as well as to graduate study in
sociology and related fields. The criminal justice program prepares
students for careers in a broad array of justice-related settings, and
complements its specifically criminal justice courses with relevant
sociological and anthropological course offerings as well.
In
response to the challenges of a changing labor market, the department
has committed itself to a skill-based curriculum designed to foster
mastery of both quantitative and qualitative skills that can be applied
in a wide range of job settings. All majors are expected to graduate
with a solid range of computer competencies.
50:920:301
Methods and Techniques of Social Research should be taken shortly after
the introductory courses and preferably before the junior year. All
transfer students should take this course in their first term at
Rutgers-Camden.
Students wishing to major in either sociology
or criminal justice must declare a major in the registrar`s office and
then request an adviser in the Office for Student Life. Students
wishing to major in both sociology and criminal justice also must meet
with the Director of Criminal Justice for advising. Subsequently,
students will be notified of the name of their faculty adviser;
students should consult with their faculty adviser regularly each term.