Gretchen Ruth Cusick
University of Chicago
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Featured researches published by Gretchen Ruth Cusick.
Social Service Review | 2007
Thomas E. Keller; Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Mark E. Courtney
The transition to adulthood is marked by new roles and responsibilities in such interrelated domains as education, employment, and family formation. This study investigates the capacity of adolescents on the verge of emancipation from the child welfare system to navigate this transition. To explore heterogeneity in adolescents’ preparation for independent living, person‐oriented methods are applied to a large, representative sample of youth about to exit foster care. The analysis suggests four subpopulations defined by distinctive profiles on indicators reflecting multiple domains of life experience. Identifying the particular needs and challenges of subpopulations has implications for efforts to match adolescents aging out of the child welfare system with appropriate services.
American Journal of Orthopsychiatry | 2012
Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Judy Havlicek; Mark E. Courtney
This study examines a sample of foster youth at the onset of the transition to adulthood and explores how social bonds are related to the risk of arrest during adulthood. Drawing from official arrest records, event history models are used to examine the time to arrest. Because individuals may be at risk for different types of crime, competing risk regression models are used to distinguish among arrests for drug-related, nonviolent, or violent crimes. Between the ages of 17-18 and 24, 46% of former foster youth experience an arrest. Arrests were evenly distributed across drug, nonviolent, and violent crimes columns. Although findings fail to support the significance of social bonds to interpersonal domains, bonds to employment and education are associated with a lower risk for arrest. Child welfare policy and practice implications for building connections and protections around foster youth are discussed.
Crime & Delinquency | 2010
Stacy Hoskins Haynes; Barry Ruback; Gretchen Ruth Cusick
Sentencing decisions are the product of a group of courtroom actors, primarily judges and district attorneys. Although the structure of the courtroom workgroup and the interdependencies among members are assumed to be important determinants of sentencing decisions, the degree of this importance and the specific mechanisms through which workgroups affect these decisions have not been investigated. This study used data from the Pennsylvania Commission on Sentencing (PCS) for the years 1990 to 2000 to examine how three social psychological aspects of courtroom workgroups (similarity, proximity, and stability) affect sentencing decisions. Results indicated (a) that workgroups generally had very high levels of similarity in terms of race, gender, and political party but lower levels of similarity in terms of age, college education, and law school education and (b) that proximity and stability were generally high. Controlling for individual, case, and distal contextual factors, workgroup factors affected the decision to incarcerate, the decision to impose fines, and the decision to impose restitution. In particular, proximity increased the use of economic sanctions relative to incarceration and stability was associated with a decrease in the imposition of economic sanctions. Similarity had inconsistent effects.
Journal of Family Violence | 2012
Alison C. Cares; Gretchen Ruth Cusick
Intimate partner abusers often focus on physical violence, but abuse may also include exploiting a partner’s faith or subculture. Alternatively, faith or subculture may be a source of strength and support for victims. We explored this by analyzing case files from a Jewish domestic violence services agency. Jewish identity conditions women’s experiences with intimate partner abuse through the use of Judaism as a “tool” for abuse, the role of Jewish holidays and observances, and the role of the Jewish community. While partners of abused Jewish women often perverted the laws and traditions of Judaism to control their partners and the reaction of the larger community varied, being part of an integrated cultural and religious community offered support for some women.
Archive | 2011
Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Mark E. Courtney; Judy Havlicek; Nathan Hess
Howard Journal of Criminal Justice | 2009
Vashti Louise Berry; Michael Little; Nick Axford; Gretchen Ruth Cusick
Social Work Faculty Publications and Presentations | 2007
Mark E. Courtney; Amy Dworsky; Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Judy Havlicek; Alfred Pérez; Thomas E. Keller
Children and Youth Services Review | 2014
Andrew Zinn; Gretchen Ruth Cusick
Archive | 2012
Jiffy Lansing; Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Nathan Hess
Archive | 2010
Judy Havlicek; Gretchen Ruth Cusick; Mark E. Courtney