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Session Submission Type: Complete Thematic Panel
This panel includes researchers and doctoral students from the University of Cincinnati who have conducted a series of national surveys with embedded experimental designs. These surveys probe a variety of issues related to crime, justice, and the people directly impacted by the legal system. The papers presented examine public perceptions of people who have been exonerated, of the relationship between immigration and gang violence, of people who are reentering communities after incarceration, and of compassionate release for the aging prison population.
Public Opinion on Exonerees and Their Status: Examining the Opinion of Lawfully Convicted and Wrongfully Convicted Individuals, Gender, Race, and their Reentry Support. - Martha McCullough, University of Cincinnati; Ráchael Powers, University of Cincinnati
Immigrant “Killers and Criminal Gangs?”: Public Perception on Immigration, Crime, and Gangs - Calvin Proffit, University of Cincinnati; Ben Feldmeyer, University of Cincinnati
Public Attitudes Towards People in Need: An Experiment on Reentry Support - Natalie Artman, University of Cincinnati
You’ve Got a Friend in Me: Willingness to Interact With Those That Are Justice-Involved - Laura Nolterieke, University of Cincinnati
Public Opinion on Compassionate Release: An Intersectional Analysis of Perceptions and Policy Implications - Alicen Potts, University of Cincinnati; Ráchael Powers, University of Cincinnati
Division of Public Opinion and Policy