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Featured researches published by Gregory S. Kowalski.


Deviant Behavior | 1990

Heroin use, crime, and the «main hustle»

Gregory S. Kowalski; Charles E. Faupel

The relationship between expensive drug use and criminal behavior has been the subject of continuing debate among social and behavioral scientists. One focus of this debate concerns the extent to w...


American Journal of Criminal Justice | 1994

Crime, social disorganization, and social structure: A research note on the use of interurban ecological models

Thomas A. Petee; Gregory S. Kowalski; Don W. Duffield

The social disorganization perspective, as set forth by Clifford Shaw and Henry McKay, has enjoyed renewed interest in criminological explanations of crime and delinquency. This paper extends this perspective beyond the traditional intraurban focus of the neighborhood to a more encompassing interurban model, using 682 SMSA counties. The results using these counties were generally consistent with neighborhood studies, demonstrating the robustness of the social disorganization model.


American Journal of Criminal Justice | 1985

The female murderer: Alabama 1929–1971

Gregory S. Kowalski; Alan J. Shields; Deborah G. Wilson

The following descriptive study of female offenders (N = 455), in a southern state covering a forty-two year period seeks to expand our knowledge about one type of female violent crime--homicide. In doing so, the results are noteworthy for their overall similarity to earlier studies and the consistency of female patterns of homicide with regard to sex role differentiation. The findings demonstrate the importance of precipitating events, the contributory effect of alcohol, and the increasing use of firearms among women offenders.


American Journal of Criminal Justice | 1990

The effect of rural population on homicide rates across the rural-urban continuum: A county level analysis

Gregory S. Kowalski; Don W. Duffield

Using 3,130 counties and equivalents in the United States for 1980, this paper provides a test of the effects of rural population and its component parts, controlling for other factors, on homicide rates, across the rural-urban continuum. The results indicate that the percent rural population of a county continues to have an inhibitory effect upon homicide. However, this result is influenced by the rural-urban context of the county.


American Journal of Criminal Justice | 1982

Juvenile post-adjudication dispositions

Gregory S. Kowalski; John P. Rickicki

Six socio-demographic and graphic and diagnostic and evaluation center (D&E) variables which influence juvenile post-adjudication disposition into one of two treatment modalities, group home or institution, are examined. Data employed in this study were gathered from completed case history records for 133 randomly sampled male juveniles processed over a six-month period by a department of youth services (DYS) facility in a southern state.Discriminant function analysis was used to determine statistical distinction between the two disposition groups. The discriminant analysis yielded five variables of statistical significance (p<-.001, canonical r =−40) which included a D&E behavior measure, age, number of past offenses, full scale IQ score, and seriousness of admitting offense.Eighty-one percent of all cases were correctly classified using the selected socio-demographic and D&E variables. Race was not found to be significant in the decision-making process at this level.


American Journal of Criminal Justice | 1979

Spatial analysis of crime and region in the united states

Gregory S. Kowalski

The regionality of crime has been presented, debated, and questioned for over a centruy of this Nation’s history, usually involving a segmental approach to crime rates or treating the various crime rates separate from one another. This paper, using states as a real unit of analysis, develops two general crime dimensions using discriminant function analysis. These two dimensions, based upon complete estimation, demonstrate the discriminating power of crime profiles in assessing regionality. Also, region as an independent variable is shown to possess strong explanatory power regarding crime patterns. Although crime viewed at the state and regional level is highly generalized, it does draw attention to spatial and temporal consistencies in the general crime pattern. This level of analysis and this paper allows a greater understanding about the country and integrates available information on crime variations within our society. Finally, implications of this study for the current criminal justice system in the united States are discussed.


Social Forces | 1987

Urbanism and Suicide: A Study of American Counties

Gregory S. Kowalski; Charles E. Faupel; Paul D. Starr


Sociological focus | 1993

Modeling Rural Violent Crime Rates: A Test of Social Disorganization Theory

Thomas A. Petee; Gregory S. Kowalski


Rural Sociology | 2010

The Impact of the Rural Population Component on Homicide Rates in the United States: A County-Level Analysis

Gregory S. Kowalski; Don W. Duffield


Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion | 1987

Sociology's one law: religion and suicide in the urban context.

Charles E. Faupel; Gregory S. Kowalski; Paul D. Starr

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