OUTSTANDING WINNERS OF AWARDS PROGRAM ANNOUNCED

The International Society for the Study of Rural Crime (ISSRC) is made up of scholars, students and practitioners from around the world with an interest in research aimed at reducing the scourge of crime in all its forms in rural areas.

The Society launched its annual awards program in 2020, offering awards in three categories.

  • The Joseph F. Donnermeyer New Scholar Award
  • The ISSRC Research Student Award
  • The ISSRC Policy, Practice and Engagement Award

The President of the Society, Emeritus Professor Joseph F. Donnermeyer, said the field of applications for each award category in 2021 was very strong.

“The judging panels had their work cut out this year”, Professor Donnermeyer said.

“Applications were of a very high calibre, showing that the future of the Society and of rural crime studies is in excellent hands.

“I was impressed with the innovative ways which applicants are thinking about how we can tackle crime in rural places – both in a scholarly way but also important practically as well.

“It’s one thing to sit at a desk putting thoughts to paper. It’s another thing altogether to think cleverly as to how these ideas can help shift policy and practice.

“On behalf of the Society’s membership, hearty congratulations and hats off to the three 2021 award recipients!”, Professor Donnermeyer said.

Winners receive a certificate, a cash prize and a book voucher kindly dontaed by Britsol University Press.

 

          Bristol University Press Logo

 

The 2021 ‘Joseph F. Donnermeyer New Scholar Award’ is presented to:

 

Dr Tarah Hodgkinson, Wilfrid Laurier University, Ontario, Canada.

Tarah is a very productive scholar, and has written rural-focused articles in both an Australian and Canadian context. She has an impressive track record, with 25 journal articles, 6 book chapters and 11 other publications. She has also received international awards, showing her impact and reputation on this level. Her funding to date is also noteworthy.

In the co-authored article she submitted, Tarah identifies a research and evidence deficit in the topic studied; fear of crime in non-urban contexts. She talks about contributing factors such as neglect of the rural in research and the myth of rural idyll, and points to need to examine rural, including in relation to differences in crime decline. Overall, there is a clear contribution to rural criminology (and there are both research and practice implications and contributions) and she is an incredible early career researcher.

The panel was able to see how Tarah’s work has not only made an impact as an academic but also in the applied sense as a crime prevention practitioner.

The 2021 ISSRC Research Student Award is presented to:

 

Cecili Doorewaard, University of South Africa

The panel was unanimous in their decision of awarding Cecili the ISSRC Research Student Award for 2021. The Research Student Award is given to research student (Honours / Masters / PhD student) for a sole-authored piece of writing associated with their research (unpublished or published) in rural criminology.

While all of the applications produced excellent work, Cecili’s research stood out in large part due to its novelty, depth of insight and, ultimately, significant contribution to the field of rural criminology. Specifically, her study explored, describe and explained the criminal behaviour associated with livestock-theft. While farm crime is a field with a relatively healthy empirical basis, very little is known about the perpetrators of these crimes themselves. Cecili’s work therefore provides new insight into offender characteristics, modus operandi and motive.

Importantly, Cecili took these findings and considered them in the context of criminological theory to help explain the how and why of livestock theft, and what drives offenders to commit such acts. Needless to say, such information is valuable from the perspective of policy and practice. To this end, Cecili also drew on these important findings to make a number of key recommendations to enable the criminal justice system and livestock owners to tackle live-stock theft. In short, this work deserves to be recognised and awarded and rural criminologists more broadly would do well to follow Cecili’s lead and consider criminal behaviour associated with livestock-theft from a comparative international perspective.

 

The 2021 ISSRC Policy, Practice and Engagement Award is presented to:

 

The New South Wales Police Force Rural Crime Prevention Team (Led by Det Insp Cameron Whiteside)

In aggregate, the NSW Rural Crime team is outwardly focussed, such as with their involvement with student learning, engagement with academia, interactions with farmers and so on. They have developed a clear leadership role in Australia and New Zealand, notably with the creation of a nationally accredited course, as well as the information booklet. Clear evidence is provided on a range of initiatives which are innovative and aimed at addressing rural crime in NSW (but with national/international potential as well).

The team exemplifies the purpose of the Award – practical application from the law enforcement side that targets and aids potential victims in increasing security, works collaboratively with researchers and the educational environment (outreach through teaching as well). The level of innovation has made them a leader in Australia – policy, practice, and engagement all.

Roundtable alert! The Impact of Natural Resources & Energy Development on Rural Crime

The International Society for the Study of Rural Crime – @RuCrimSociety – invites you to this virtual roundtable! The focus will be on “The Impact of Natural Resources & Energy Development on Rural Crime”.

About this event

The extraction of natural resources and the development of large-scale energy projects has had destructive environmental and social impacts on some rural communities throughout the globe.

This roundtable brings together four leading experts who have researched the impacts of population increases and industrial development on rural communities, including the relationships between these booms and social impacts including antisocial behavior and crime.

The four panelists discuss the outcomes of their current research and the potential for the future as we enter the early stages of an energy crisis.

They respond to two key questions:

  1. What are the impacts of natural resource and energy development on rural crime?
  2. What can be done about this issue?

Ample opportunity will be provided for attendees to engage with the panel.

 

Featuring

 

Moderator – Dr Matt Thomas

Professor, California State University, Chico

Dr Thomas received a BA from St. Joseph’s University, and an MA and PhD from the University of Maryland, College Park. He teaches political science, criminal justice, and public administration in the department’s undergraduate and graduate programs. He is the coordinator of the MA in Political Science program, and is the internship coordinator for the MPA program. His research focuses on both urban politics, including work on New Orleans (Reforming New Orleans: The Contentious Politics of Change in the Big Easy with Peter Burns, Cornell Press), and on criminal justice topics, including work on police strength, concealed weapons on campus, and the impacts of AB 109 and Prop 47 on California’s criminal justice realignment agenda. Matt received the university’s Outstanding Service Award in 2016-17.

Panelist – Dr Jeffrey B. Jacquet

Associate Professor, Ohio State University (Ohio, United States)

Dr Jacquet is an Associate Professor of Rural Sociology in the School of Environment and Natural Resources at The Ohio State University in Columbus, Ohio, USA. One of the first to study the community-level implications of hydraulic fracturing, Dr Jacquet has gone on to examine the social ramifications of a range of renewable- and non-renewable-energy systems at institutions including the University of Wyoming, Cornell University, and South Dakota State University. At Ohio State, Jacquet leads students through coursework, research, and mentorship to examine the areas of energy, environment, and rural societies. He is the lead editor of a new collected volume titled Energy Impacts: A Multidisciplinary Exploration of North American Energy Development published in 2021 by the University Press of Colorado.

Panelist – Dr Christopher O’Connor

Associate Professor, University of Ontario Institute of Technology (Ontario, Canada)

Dr O’Connor is an Associate Professor of Criminology at Ontario Tech University. He received his PhD in Sociology from the University of Calgary where he studied school-to-work transitions and perceptions of crime in the energy boomtown of Fort McMurray, Alberta. His research examines energy resource boomtowns, people’s use and perceptions of emerging technology, policing, and young people’s participation in crime, perceptions of the environment, and school-to-work transitions. Dr O’Connor has recently completed a SSHRC Insight Development Grant examining the risks and opportunities of hydraulic fracturing and related renewable and non-renewable energy technologies. He is currently co-director on a SSHRC-funded Partnership Development grant examining facial recognition use by the police which involves working with a range of multi-disciplinary stakeholders to examine the viability of the technology for police use.

Panelist – Professor Thomasine Heitkamp

Emeritus Faculty and LCSW, University of North Dakota (North Dakota, USA)

Professor Heitkamp served as a faculty member at the University of North Dakota for 39 years, achieving the highest rank of Chester Fritz Distinguished Professor. She is currently an Emeritus faculty and a Licensed Clinical Social Worker in North Dakota. She also serves as a Behavioral Health Research Specialists for the University of North Dakota – Office of Research and Economic Development. Professor Heitkamp served as Co-PI for a National Institute of Justice-funded three-year study to examine the impact of oil development on inter-personal violence in the Bakken Oil fields of North Dakota and Montana. She has served as the PI on several large grant-funded projects including her service as PI and Co-Director of the Mountain Plains Mental Health Technology Transfer Center and Addiction Technology Transfer Center (ATTC). She has published in a host of peer-reviewed journals with a focus on workforce development serving tribal and rural communities.

Panelist – Dr Rick Ruddell

Professor, University of Regina (Saskatchewan , Canada)

Dr Ruddell serves as the Law Foundation of Saskatchewan Chair in Police Research at the University of Regina, Canada. Prior to this appointment he served as Director of Operational Research with the Correctional Service of Canada, and held faculty positions at Eastern Kentucky University and the California State University, Chico. Prior to his academic career, he served with the Saskatchewan Ministry of Corrections, Public Safety and Policing as a supervisor and manager. Dr Ruddell’s research has focused upon policing, criminal justice policy, and juvenile justice, and he has published over 150 articles and technical reports. He has written extensively about the impact of natural resource booms on rural communities and published Oil, Gas, and Crime: The Dark Side of the Boomtown (Palgrave Macmillan) in 2017.

 

‘Rural Policing in North America’ roundtable

Rural crime and criminal justice practices and responses face different challenges from those experienced in urban contexts. Our new series of ISSRC Roundtables investigate challenges in international contexts and provide opportunities for participants to promote their research and practice and build collaborations for future initiatives. Follow on Twitter @RuCrimSociety with #ISSRC2021

Rural crime and criminal justice practices and responses face different challenges from those experienced in urban contexts.

On 15 September 2021, ISSRC proudly hosted a practitioner-focused roundtable which considered community policing and crime-reduction efforts on issues surrounding rural policing. The roundtable provided an opportunity for participants to hear first-hand from four leaders in rural policing about work being done in the US and Canada to police rural crime.

Missed the Roundtable – don’t dispair! You can watch it on our YouTube channel.

We asked our panellists three key things:

  1. What is the key element to successful community policing in your community?
  2. What is one initiative in which you have successfully engaged the community in crime-reduction efforts?
  3. What is the most significant challenge to successfully reducing crime in your community?

Moderator and host

The event will be hosted and moderated

by Jessica Peterson

from the University of Nebraska at Kearney  (United States)

Featuring…

 

Inspector Farica Prince

Blood Tribe Police Service (Canada)

Inspector Prince joined Dakota Ojibway Police Service in 2001 and served her home community of Sioux Valley, in south west Manitoba. In 2005, Inspector Prince made the difficult decision to leave her home and joined the Blood Tribe Police Service. The Blood Tribe, aka Kainai, is the largest land-based Indigenous community in Canada. She served as an instructor/facilitator at RCMP’s national training academy in Regina Saskatchewan for three years and has been serving as the Inspector in charge of the Administrative Support Division since 2018. Inspector Prince also became a first-generation university graduate in 2019.

 

Chief Rob Davis

Chief of Police at Brantford Police Department (Canada) 

Chief Davis began his career in 1990, and has since served small rural towns and Indiginous communities throughout Canada. Prior to serving as Chief of Police, he championed the drive that led to Six Nations becoming the first Aboriginal Police Service in Canada to join the Criminal Intelligence Service of Ontario and also served as an Inspector overseeing operations throughout reserves northwest of Ontario. Chief Davis is proud to be a Mohawk from the Six Nations of the Grand River Territory and a recipient of the prestigious OACP & IPA Gimborn Scholarship for his dedication & efforts to combat gangs and organized crime.

 

Chief Jim Davis

Director of Law Enforcement Services at the University of Nebraska Kearney (United States)

Chief Davis has 37 Years of Law Enforcement Experience ranging from Police Officer to Sheriff. His current position includes Chief of Police, Emergency Management Director, and Parking Director. Chief Davis is a guest instructor at the South Dakota Law Enforcement Training Center and an adjunct Criminal Justice instructor at UNK. He has a Master’s Degree in Criminal Justice and is scheduled to graduate with his doctorate in management in 2022. He also still enjoys working the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally.

 

Mark Prosser

Retired Law Enforcement (United States)

Mr Prosser has over 40 years of Law Enforcement experience starting as a patrol officer in1979. Until his retirement in 2020, he held positions including Chief of Detectives, Supervisor for a multi-jurisdictional homicide unit, and Chief of Police in Storm Lake, Iowa. Mr Prosser was named Law Enforcement Executive of the Year for 2016 by the Iowa Police Chiefs Association. He holds a Bachelor of Science Degree in Police Administration and has completed some Graduate Studies in Public Administration and Management. Mr Prosser taught for 19 years at the Illinois Police Academy, Buena Vista University, and Iowa Central Community College. Currently, he works for the Catholic Diocese of Sioux City, Iowa as the Director of the Pastoral Planning Office and remains a voice for immigration reform at the national level.

 

‘POLICING RURAL COMMUNITIES’ ROUNDTABLE – 2O OCTOBER 2020

The International Society for the Study of Rural Crime – @RuCrimSociety – invites you to an online roundtable “Policing Rural Communities”.

Date and Time

Tue, 20 October 2020

5:20 PM for 5:30 PM – 7:00 PM AEDT

Check your local time here

REGISTER via EventBrite here

 

About this Event

Rural crime and criminal justice practices and responses face different challenges from those experienced in urban contexts.

This practitioner-focused roundtable investigates challenges and innovations in international contexts on issues surrounding rural policing.

This roundtable will provide an opportunity for participants to hear first-hand from four leaders in rural policing about work being done in both hemispheres to police rural crime.

We ask our panellists two key things:

  1. What are the key challenges for rural policing?
  2. What innovations are being deployed internationally to address these challenges?

Ample opportunity will be provided for attendees to engage with the panel.

 

Roundtable Chair

The event will be hosted and moderated by Dr Jessica Peterson from the University of Nebraska at Kearney.

 

 

 

 

The Panel

Detective Inspector Cameron Whiteside
State Rural Crime Coordinator, New South Wales Police Force (Australia)

Detective Inspector Cameron Whiteside’s 31 year (24 years as a Detective) started in 1989 when he joined the New South Wales Police Force. He currently serves as the inaugural State Rural Crime Coordinator for the Rural Crime Prevention Team that covers approximately 95% of New South Wales. The Team supports Police Districts and Police Area Commands in the prevention and response to rural crime.

 

Inspector Alan Dron
National Rural Crime Co-ordinator, Police Scotland

Inspector Alan Dron has over 28 years in the police service, including the Scottish Crime and Drug Enforcement Agency. He currently serves as the Rural Crime Co-ordinator for Police Scotland and ensures smooth operations of the Scottish Partnership Against Rural Crime (SPARC) from his base at the Gartcosh Scottish Crime Campus. SPARC consists of key partnerships and organisations that work together to advance crime prevention and enforcement strategies in diverse rural communities.

 

Tori Heaney
Farm Crime Advisor, Farm Crime Coordination Unit, Victoria Police (Australia)

Tori, who owns her family farm in rural Victoria, has degrees in Criminology and Business as well as a Graduate Certificate in Intelligence Analysis. She currently provides high-level analysis, advice, and research direction for the Farm Crime Coordination Unit of Victoria Police. Victoria Police has a collection of more than 60 Farm Crime Liaison Officers (FCLO) across the state with expertise in investigating livestock theft and farm related crime.

 

Christian Mouhanna
Director, Centre de recherches sociologiques sur le droit et les institutions pénales (Centre for Sociological Research on Law and Criminal Justice Institutions)

Christian Mouhanna is a permanent researcher at the CNRS (French National Centre for Scientific Research) and Director of CESDIP (Centre for Sociological Research on Law and Criminal Justice Institutions), a major venue for the study of criminal justice and deviance in France. He worked for more than 20 years on the French Police Forces, including the French Gendarmerie, the courts and security policies.

The roundtable is free to attend.

However, if you are able to make a donation, funds will be directed to the ISSRC awards program for higher degree research students, early career researchers, and practitioners.

REGISTER via EventBrite here

Interested in joining the ISSRC? Visit www.issrc.net/membership