Ineke Haen Marshall - United States
Ineke Haen Marshall
Professor Ineke Haen Marshall focuses on questions of crime: what makes someone commit a crime, and what factors make someone more likely to become a delinquent?
Her current research focuses on the cross-national study of juvenile delinquency. As part of this, she is the chair of the steering committee of the International Self-Report Study of Delinquency, an international collaborative study of over 50 countries, and is the inaugural Editor-in-Chief of International Criminology, the official publication of the Division of International Criminology of the American Society of Criminology.
As a Dutch-American citizen who has worked in the US for more than two decades, Professor Haen Marshall has a unique perspective on how both countries approach criminology. She has earned degrees from Tilburg University, the College of William and Mary, and Bowling Green State University, and serves on the board to the European Society of Criminology and the Dutch Network of Academics in the US (DNA-US).
This interview has been edited for length and clarity.
In the early part of my research career, I focused on what is called criminal career research, where you focus on individual offenders to understand whether it is possible to identify high-level offenders. This was tied to the idea of selective incapacitation, a US policy based on the idea that it is possible to predict the career of offenders, the onset of offending, the frequency and level of violence. When I was at the University of Nebraska at Omaha, I worked with another young colleague on this for a pragmatic reason: we wanted to get good publications and tenure, and we used innovative grants to get there.
The two of us collected lots of criminal justice records and compared them to interviews with offenders. Through a self-report survey of about 2,000 offenders, we developed a life event calendar that allowed us to be specific about what they were doing prior to incarceration. We asked them many questions about the crimes they committed and about the facts recalled. We looked into the local life circumstances: Did they have a job? Were they married? Were they in the military? Were they on probation? We found that it is possible to link the intensity and level of offending over a criminal career to certain local life events. Our policy recommendations did not focus on selective incapacitation but instead on how to influence these life events.
I think what is important is that students get to speak to someone who has had different experiences from them. Especially for Dutch students - you don’t want to come into the United States and say that everything is better back in the Netherlands. On the other hand, you can’t study criminology without looking at issues like inequality and racism. It would be important for students to realize that these circumstances exist in both countries, not only in the US. Crime is such a highly politicized topic which makes teaching it challenging. Criminology is all about the root causes about crime, and students can become upset when confronted with the underlying structural causes, including the myth of the American Dream.
In addition, something that’s difficult to discuss in the class room in the US is the role of race. It’s the reality that basically, criminal behavior as well as the criminal justice system are shaped by systemic racism, and as a criminologist you know that and you have to talk about it. Race has to be an explicit part of what you teach, but it is a highly controversial and politicized topic which requires careful and emphatic discussion, but fortunately, you can draw from the insights of decades of social science research. Crime is a negative topic, and discussion of its root causes requires an open mind and willingness to take serious the need to examine our own biases – true for both students as well as the professor.
Bio & CV
1950: Born in Tilburg, the Netherlands
1973: Master of Science, Sociology, Tilburg University, the Netherlands
1974: Master of Arts, Sociology, College of William and Mary, US
1977: Doctor of Philosophy (PhD), Sociology, Bowling Green State University, US
1977-1980: Assistant professor, Youngstown State University, US
1980-2006: Assistant, Associate and Professor, University of Nebraska at Omaha, US
2006-present: Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Northeastern University, US