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Robert
Sampson
Robert
J. Sampson is the Lucy Flower Professor in Sociology at the
University of Chicago and Senior Research Fellow at the American
Bar Foundation. His major research interests include criminology,
the life course, and urban sociology. Sampson is currently
studying the nature, sources, and consequences of community-level
social processes (e.g., collective efficacy, network density,
organizational participation, and spatial dynamics) as part
of the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods
(PHDCN), for which he serves as Scientific Director. He is
also engaged in a longitudinal study of crime and deviance
over 70 years in the lives of 1,000 disadvantaged men born
in Boston during the Great Depression era. His book with John
Laub on this project, Crime in the Making: Pathways and
Turning Points Through Life (Harvard University Press,
1993), received the outstanding book award from the American
Society of Criminology, the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences,
and the Crime, Law, and Deviance Section of the American Sociological
Association.
In 1994,
Sampson was named as Fellow of the American Society of Criminology.
In 1997, he was a Fellow at the Center for Advanced Study
in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, California. In 1999-2000,
Sampson was appointed to serve on the National Research Council's
"Committee on Future Research Directions for Behavioral
and Social Sciences at the NIH," which issued its report
in February, 2001.
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