Northeastern Undergraduate Catalog

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College of Criminal Justice

Jack R. Greene, PhD, Dean
Robert D. Croatti, AB, Associate Dean for College Operations
John F. McDevitt, MPA, Associate Dean and Director for the Center for Criminal Justice
  Policy Research
Lester W. McCullough Jr., BA, Assistant Dean for Administrative Services
Robert E. Fuller, MA, Assistant Dean for Student Services

Professor
Donna M. Bishop, PhD
James Alan Fox, PhD

Associate Professors
Frank A. Schubert, JD
Wallace W. Sherwood, LLM

Assistant Professors
Jennifer L. Hartman, PhD
Dana M. Nurge, PhD
William Terrill, PhD
Michael G. Turner, PhD
Richard P. Wiebe, JD, PhD

Schulman Professor
Harvey Burstein, JD
Visiting Professors
Jeb A. Booth, MA
Roderick L. Ireland, LLM, PhD
Professor Emeritus
Edith E. Flynn, PhD
also in this section:

class entrance requirements
graduation requirements
transfer credit
bachelor of science

The College of Criminal Justice was established in 1967 as one of the first professional schools of its kind. Since its founding, the college has become a leading force in education, research, and policy-making in both the public and private sectors of the criminal justice field.

The college has a unified undergraduate major, leading to a Bachelor of Science degree in criminal justice, which comprehensively covers the field of criminal justice across both the public and private domains. Building on a solid foundation of required courses focusing on law, criminology, administration of justice, and research tools, the curriculum allows students to tailor their elective course work, in such areas as homicide, terrorism, victims, juvenile justice, security, courts, and corrections, to suit their own professional interests. In addition, students take a variety of courses in other parts of the University, in such topic areas as computer science, English, math, history, economics, political science, sociology, and psychology.

The combined five-year academic and cooperative education program allows students to concentrate in one of three areas: policing and security, legal studies, and criminology and corrections. Students may also elect not to specialize, but instead to span the broadest possible coverage of the field.

In the policing and security emphasis students learn firsthand the latest developments in policing in the United States, such as community policing, and gain an understanding of the field of security from a business rather than a law enforcement perspective.

The legal studies concentration teaches students how to analyze the mechanics of law and the legal process and to examine the historical and philosophical foundations of our legal system. Students who concentrate on legal studies are well-prepared for law school.

In the criminology and corrections concentration students investigate the causes of crime and assess various correctional responses to criminal offending. This program is viewed as a stepping-stone to advanced graduate study and to employment in the corrections area.

Co-op provides opportunities in the full range of career settings, including parole or probation offices, law firms, police departments, private security agencies, public or private institutions, social and government agencies, prisons, and planning and evaluation units. These career-oriented experiences help students to better understand the theory and research presented in their classes.

The college maintains close ties to criminal justice agencies in the community, such as the Boston Police Department and the Office of the Attorney General, and hosts the Justice George Lewis Ruffin Society, an organization of minority criminal justice professionals dedicated to expanding minority involvement and leadership in the criminal justice system. In addition, the college cooperates with the mayor's office and a number of private corporations in helping to run various community-based anticrime programs. The college faculty also has a strong voice and participates actively in research and policy-making at a national and international level. In addition to a variety of major research projects, the college houses the Journal of Quantitative Criminology, a leading international journal of research in criminology and criminal justice. See course descriptions for more information.

Class Entrance Requirements

Students are required to maintain the following overall quality-point averages to advance to the next class rank and to graduate.

Sophomore 1.8
Middler 1.8
Junior 1.8
Senior 1.9
To graduate 2.0

Graduation Requirements

Degree candidates must complete all prescribed work, a total of 176 quarter hours of credit. Students are also urged to meet the requirements of the Department of Cooperative Education.

Transfer Credit

No student transferring from another college or university is eligible to receive a degree until at least one year of academic work immediately preceding graduation has been completed at Northeastern.

Bachelor of Science Curriculum

Quarter 1 CJ 1005, Freshman Seminar 1; CJ 1151, Introduction to Law and the Legal Process 1; ENG 1110, College Writing 1; PSY 1111, Foundations of Psychology 1; and SOC 1100, Introduction to Sociology.
Quarter 2 CJ 1101, Administration of Criminal Justice; COM 1105, Computer Science and Its Applications; POL 1110, Introduction to Politics; and PSY 1112, Foundations in Psychology 2.
Quarter 3 CJ 1006, Freshman Seminar 2; CMN 1116, Public Speaking; ENG 1111, College Writing 2; POL 1111, Introduction to American Government; and one criminal justice freshman elective.
Quarter 4 CJ 1201, Criminology; one criminal justice diversity requirement; one math/science requirement 1; and one history requirement 1.
Quarter 5 CJ 1251, Introduction to Criminal Law; ECN 1001, Economic Problems and Perspectives; POL 1318, State and Local Government; and one history requirement.
Quarter 6 CJ 1252, Criminal Due Process; CJ 1453, Criminal Justice Research Methods; ENG 1350, Writing for the Professions; and one math/science requirement 2.
Quarter 7 CJ 1454, Criminal Justice Statistics; one criminal justice elective; one non-criminal-justice elective; and one philosophy requirement. Quarters 8­11 32 quarter hours of criminal justice electives and 32 quarter hours of non-criminal-justice requirements.

Questions?
Contact the Registrar's Office
120 Hayden Hall
(617) 373-2300
registrar@neu.edu