Faculty of Arts and Sciences
Web Site: http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~nbcjm
Program Director: Arnold G. Hyndman, Dean of Livingston College, A.B., Princeton; Ph.D., California (Los Angeles)
Program Committee:
Douglas H. Blair, Chair, FAS and Economics; B.A., Swarthmore; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale
Lennox Hinds, Criminal Justice; B.S., CUNY (City College); J.D., Rutgers
Paul Hirschfield, Sociology and Psychology; B.A., Kalamazoo College; M.A., Ph.D. Northwestern
Douglas Husak, Philosophy; A.B., Denison; Ph.D., J.D., Ohio State
Ellen L. Idler, Sociology; B.A., College of Wooster; M.A., Rutgers; M.Phil, Ph.D., Yale
Lee Jussim, Psychology; B.A., Massachusetts; Ph.D., Michigan
Susan Lawrence, Political Science; B.A., Furman; M.A., Ph.D., Johns Hopkins
Michael G. Maxfield, Criminal Justice (Newark); B.A., Ohio State; M.A., Ph.D., Northwestern
Lisa L. Miller, Political Science; B.A., Virginia; M.A., Ph.D., Washington
Edward Rhodes, FAS and Political Science; A.B. Harvard; Ph.D., Princeton
Albert R. Roberts, Criminal Justice; B.A., C.W. Post; M.A., Long Island; D.S.W., Maryland
Jackson Toby, Sociology; B.A., CUNY (Brooklyn College); M.A., Ph.D., Harvard
Michael Welch, Criminal Justice; B.A., Benedictine College; M.A.,
Missouri (Kansas City); M.S., Illinois State; Ph.D., North Texas
The program in criminal justice is a comprehensive interdisciplinary
program that blends a strong liberal arts education experience with
preprofessional instruction in the field of criminal justice. The
program provides students with a rich understanding of crime and
criminal justice in the United States and abroad. Graduates of the
program are well-informed citizens on the topic of crime and justice,
and qualified for graduate study or for employment as practitioners in
a variety of legal, policy-making, and law enforcement areas.