The 2013 Elliott Youth Development Lecture
2015; Springer Science+Business Media; Volume: 44; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1007/s10964-015-0251-y
ISSN1573-6601
Autores Tópico(s)Child Abuse and Trauma
ResumoI am most pleased to introduce the 2013 Elliott Youth Development Lecture. The lecture is authored and presented by a leading researcher widely recognized as having made foundational contributions to our understanding of youth. In 2013, Ronald L. Simons was selected as the recipient of this recognition by a group of researchers at Indiana University, where the lecture was delivered. His engaging presentation became the basis of the invited article published in this issue. We extend our appreciation to Mark T. Berg, a former faculty member at Indiana University, for inviting Professor Simons and serving as host. The lecture is supported by a generous donation from Howard R. ‘‘Skip’’ Elliott, BA’77. Elliott was a double major in Forensic Studies and English and continues to be a faithful alumnus of what has become known as the Department of Criminal Justice at Indiana University. After graduating from the Department, Elliott then graduated from the state police academy, after which he joined the police department of Conrail railroad. Eventually, he joined CSX Transportation, where he currently serves as vice president of public safety and environment. CSX Transportation is one of America’s major freight railroads and a Fortune 250 Company that operates in 23 states and in cities such as Chicago, Boston, and New York City. Elliott leads CSX’s hazardous materials transportation safety efforts, its environmental protection program, its police department and its homeland security initiatives. Among his many commitments to public service is his exemplary service to National Safe Place, an organization that links runaway and homeless youth with the help needed to be safe (see Walsh and Donaldson 2009). Elliott earned Indiana University’s Department of Criminal Justice’s first-ever Distinguished Alumni Award, for the great credit he has given the Department, Indiana University, and the field of criminal justice. It was Elliott’s dedication to serving others, and his passion for helping youth, that led to the development of this lecture series. The Elliott Youth Development Lecture has many goals. The lecture seeks to recognize the accomplishments of a leading scholar who has made a foundational impact on our understanding of youth and social responses to them. It does so by requesting that the lecturers offer a review of their work, their sense of where the field is heading, and their thoughts on potentially fruitful research and policy directions. Publishing a written version of the lecture helps to enhance its reach and, equally importantly, attract increased attention to the multidisciplinary study of adolescence. Professor Simons was the ideal recipient of this honor. He currently is a distinguished research professor in the Department of Sociology and a fellow in the Institute for Behavior Research at the University of Georgia. Dr. Simons also is a Senior Fellow in the Owens Institute for Behavioral Research and Affiliate in both the Center for Gene-Social Environment Transaction and the Center for Contextual Genetics and Prevention Science at the University of Georgia. He received his doctorate from Florida State University and completed his postdoctoral work at the University of Wisconsin. Using a life course perspective, he has investigated a wide variety of issues relating to child and adolescent development. Over the years, his articles have examined the manner in which family processes, peer associations, community contexts, and incarceration combine to influence risk for criminal behavior and emotional problems; the effect of discrimination and racial socialization on physical and mental health; social experiences and cognitive schemas that influence the R. J. R. Levesque (&) Indiana University, 302 Sycamore Hall, Bloomington, IN, USA e-mail: rlevesqu@indiana.edu
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