Douglas N. Evans
Mercy College
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Publication
Featured researches published by Douglas N. Evans.
Deviant Behavior | 2015
R. Terry Furst; Douglas N. Evans
Research was conducted on variations and commonalities of sexual offenders and heroin abusers and how they manage stigma in their everyday lives. Interviews with 13 sex offenders (SOs) and 44 heroin abusers (HAs) were conducted in New York City. Results suggest that both SOs and HAs disclose or conceal their stigmatized status based on their relationship to others and the situations in which they anticipate social condemnation. Both groups have formed intra-group hierarchies based on status, where child molesters and heroin abusers receive the most disdain. Some heroin abusers manage their stigma by engaging in behavior that we term redemptive passing, in which stigmatized individuals attempt to pass as non-stigmatized through deceptive means in order to make amends for prior harms they have caused. The stigmatization of sex offenders and heroin abusers has important implications for health, as members of these groups are less likely to seek treatment in order to distance themselves from their stigmatizing status.
Journal of Criminal Justice | 2016
Douglas N. Evans
Abstract Prior research suggests that a felony conviction limits housing opportunities. This study used an experimental audit design to determine the effect of a felony conviction on real estate agent willingness to accept prospective clients. A male and a female ‘tester’ posing as apartment seekers called real estate agents in New York City to ask for assistance renting an apartment. Conviction type was manipulated such that testers posed as non-offenders (control) or as having a prior conviction for either drug trafficking, statutory rape, or child molestation (experimental groups) to measure the extent to which offense type influenced agent responses. Analyses indicated that a prior conviction was associated with a significant decrease in agent willingness to accept prospective clients, most notably for those with child molestation conviction. Agents were more willing to help prospective clients seeking more expensive apartments, although the time of year nullified the effect of cost. The results suggest that agents may be more concerned with the financial status of prospective clients than their criminal history but market forces override their decisions to accept a client. This study has implications for the ways in which the formerly incarcerated seek housing and how policy can address housing this population.
Deviant Behavior | 2017
R. Terry Furst; Douglas N. Evans
ABSTRACT The study provides a qualitative analysis of 300 real estate agent responses to telephone calls from researchers posing as convicted felons and inquiring about renting an apartment. Telephone calls were made to real estate agents in New York State and primarily in New York City. Criminal conviction type was manipulated across callers who revealed three types of prior convictions: child molestation, statutory rape, or drug trafficking. Analyses indicate that decisions about renting fall within a continuum of responses, including overt rejection, deferral of rental decision to landlords, ambivalence on the part of the agent, concerns about financial ability to pay rent, and concealing the caller’s offense from the landlord. Reasons for acceptance and rejection of renting an apartment are explored. The stigmatized status of offenders appears to have contributed to the variations in the real estate agents responses.
Criminal Justice Policy Review | 2017
Douglas N. Evans; Cynthia-Lee Williams
New York City’s Stop-and-Frisk program has been a contentious police practice for more than 40 years. There is extensive research that examines attitudes toward the police; however, empirical research has yet to analyze citizens’ perceptions of stop-and-frisk. This study uses data from pedestrians to uncover their opinions of stop-and-frisk. Results demonstrate that several demographic characteristics predicted attitudes toward stop-and-frisk; minorities and younger citizens had less positive views, and unfavorable opinions were linked to living in New York City; having less education; being unemployed; having lower income; not married; no children; having been previously frisked by police; and vicarious experiences of others with stop-and-frisk. The results provide insights into demographic and experiential factors that influence attitudes toward stop-and-frisk. As perceived unfairness often undermines police authority, identifying factors that predict unfavorable attitudes toward police practices can aide in allocating resources to further efforts to improve police–community relations.
Crime & Delinquency | 2018
Douglas N. Evans; Emily Pelletier; Jason Szkola
A criminal conviction results in consequences that extend beyond incarceration. Self-stigmatization is a negative consequence that many formerly individuals experience. It manifests in low self-esteem and personal barriers to reentry. This study explores higher education programs in prison as a moderator of self-stigma. Using qualitative interviews, this study investigated the perceptions of formerly incarcerated individuals who participated in higher education in prison in regard to the ways in which incarceration and education affected their self-stigma. Results indicate that incarceration influences self-stigma, but education enhances a sense of empowerment and motivation to resist the negative effects of self-stigma. Reducing the stigmatization of formerly incarcerated individuals is important because if they view themselves positively, it can improve their reentry and life trajectory.
Deviant Behavior | 2018
Michelle A. Cubellis; Douglas N. Evans; Adam Gregory Fera
ABSTRACT The current study compiles open-source news reports involving vigilantes who targeted individuals because of their status as a sex offender (SO) or their suspected involvement in a sex offense. The Sex Offender-Vigilante database includes 279 separate incidents of vigilantism against SOs, ranging from the dissemination of unsanctioned fliers to murder. Results indicate that the stigmatization that convicted SOs experience is so pervasive that it extends even to individuals suspected of having committed a sexual offense.
Journal of Experimental Criminology | 2015
Douglas N. Evans; Jeremy R. Porter
American Journal of Criminal Justice | 2015
Douglas N. Evans; Michelle A. Cubellis
Archive | 2014
Douglas N. Evans
Advances in Social Sciences Research Journal | 2014
Douglas N. Evans; Cynthia-Lee Maragh; Jeremy R. Porter