Philip Goodman
Email: pgoodman@uci.edu
Phil Goodman is in his third year as a graduate student at the Department of
Criminology, Law and Society. After receiving his B.A. in history from Bowdoin College in 2002, he worked for a year in Baltimore, Maryland as a caseworker for The Choice Program working with at-risk and delinquent youth. He is currently engaged in a master's thesis exploring how people are sorted and sort themselves according to race, ethnicity and gang affiliation in California's prison reception centers, stemming from the recent Supreme Court decision on racial segregation in these facilities. Other interests include exploring how theories of crime are grounded in and shaped by their historical contexts, and also a general interest in juvenile delinquency and the juvenile justice system.
Phil Goodman is in his third year as a graduate student at the Department of
Criminology, Law and Society. After receiving his B.A. in history from Bowdoin College in 2002, he worked for a year in Baltimore, Maryland as a caseworker for The Choice Program working with at-risk and delinquent youth. He is currently engaged in a master's thesis exploring how people are sorted and sort themselves according to race, ethnicity and gang affiliation in California's prison reception centers, stemming from the recent Supreme Court decision on racial segregation in these facilities. Other interests include exploring how theories of crime are grounded in and shaped by their historical contexts, and also a general interest in juvenile delinquency and the juvenile justice system.
