Appendix B
List of Workshop Participants
Alfred Blumstein
H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management
Carnegie Mellon University
Patrick Clark
Office of Research and Evaluation
National Institute of Justice
Jeanette Covington
Department of Sociology
Rutgers University
Marshall DeBerry
Bureau of Justice Statistics
U.S. Department of Justice
Laura J. Dugan
Georgia State University
Department of Criminal Justice
William F. Eddy
Carnegie Mellon University
Institute for Statistics and Its Applications
Jeffrey Fagan
School of Public Health
Columbia University
David P. Farrington
Institute of Criminology
Cambridge University
Steven Fienberg
Department of Statistics
Carnegie Mellon University
Darnell Hawkins
African American Studies
University of Illinois, Chicago
Philip Heymann
Harvard Law School
Harvard University
Sally Hillsman
Office of Research and Evaluation
National Institute of Justice
Marvin D. Krohn
Department of Sociology
University at Albany, State University of New York
Candace Kruttschnitt
Department of Sociology
University of Minnesota
Judith Lessler
Statistics, Health, and Social Policy
Research Triangle Institute
Colin Loftin
School of Criminal Justice
State University of New York at Albany
James Lynch
School of Public Affairs
American University
Charles Manski
Department of Economics
Northwestern University
Michael G. Maxfield
School of Criminal Justice
Rutgers University
Richard McCleary
School of Social Ecology
University of California, Irvine
Madeline E. McNeeley
School of Criminology and Criminal Justice
University of Maryland, College Park
John Monahan
School of Law
University of Virginia
Colm O’Muircheartaigh
NORC, Statistics and Method
University of Chicago
Joan Petersilia
School of Social Ecology
University of California, Irvine
Trivellore Raghunathan
Institute for Social Research
University of Michigan
Michael Rand
Bureau of Justice Statistics
U.S. Department of Justice
Linda E. Saltzman
Injury Prevention and Control
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Sidney M. Stahl
Health Care Organizations and Social Institutions
National Institute on Aging
National Institute of Health
Elizabeth A. Stasny
Center for Survey Research
Ohio State University
Kate Stith
School of Law
Yale University
Terence P. Thornberry
School of Criminal Justice
University at Albany, State University of New York
Roger Tourangeau
Joint Program in Survey Methods
University of Maryland, College Park
James R. Walker
Department of Economics
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Charles Wellford
Center for Applied Policy Studies & School of Criminology and Criminal Justice
University of Maryland, College Park
Cathy Spatz Widom
Criminal Justice and Psychology
State University of New York at Albany
STAFF
Carol V. Petrie, Director
Committee on Law and Justice
National Research Council
Andrew A. White, Director
Committee on National Statistics
National Research Council
Nancy A. Crowell
Committee on Law and Justice
National Research Council
Ralph Patterson
Committee on Law and Justice
National Research Council
Brenda McLaughlin
Committee on Law and Justice
National Research Council
COMMITTEE ON LAW AND JUSTICE
The Committee on Law and Justice was created in 1978 to provide a rationale and model for the role of federally sponsored research in anticrime programs. It serves as a national focal point for objective analysis of crime and justice issues to inform national policy. The committee brings the knowledge and tools of the social and behavioral sciences to bear on the development of improved policy, research, and evaluation in the areas of crime prevention, intervention, and control, as well as civil justice. It does so primarily by establishing committees to synthesize, analyze, and evaluate the research from a variety of scientific disciplines that have relevance for criminal and civil justice matters. The members of the committee share a commitment to using basic and applied research to advance prevention research, improve all components of the justice system, develop a broader range of sanctions to sentence offenders; improve criminal justice technology, and expand research in support of new models of justice.