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    <loc>https://www.criminaljusticereformlab.com/our-team</loc>
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    <lastmod>2023-04-27</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Our Team</image:title>
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  <url>
    <loc>https://www.criminaljusticereformlab.com/general-2</loc>
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    <lastmod>2021-01-16</lastmod>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page - Criminal Justice Decisions Project</image:title>
      <image:caption>Explores the relationship between scholarly ideas and criminal justice decision-making through a mix of multidisciplinary research and communications strategies. The project includes: (1) a grant-funded initiative to generate actionable, evidence-based research on criminal justice reform in Arizona with the involvement of 14 of the nation’s leading criminal law scholars and criminologists; (2) the development of novel mediums of communication to disseminate that research; and (3) partnering with state and local criminal justice reform organizations.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page - Legislating Criminal Justice Reform</image:title>
      <image:caption>Examines the role that ideology, justification, and expertise play in criminal justice decision-making through a mix of empirical and qualitative methodologies. The study includes a multi-decade systematic content analysis of legislative committee hearings on issues of criminal law reform within a single jurisdiction.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page - Guilty Minds Project</image:title>
      <image:caption>Explores the relationship between mens rea policy and state and federal criminal justice reform efforts through a mix of multidisciplinary research and unique scholarly events. The project includes: (1) an innovative virtual conference involving 30 of the nation’s leading criminal law scholars and practitioners; (2) the generation of original scholarship on mens rea policy and reform; and (3) the creation of novel multimedia and educational content.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page - Mens Rea Reform in Practice</image:title>
      <image:caption>Examines the impact that mens rea reform has on criminal justice administration—including charging, convictions, and sentencing—through a mix of empirical and qualitative methodologies. The study includes a nationwide assessment of the consequences stemming from a judicially-driven change in mens rea policy at the federal level.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page</image:title>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page</image:title>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page</image:title>
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      <image:title>Other Possible Home Page</image:title>
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  <url>
    <loc>https://www.criminaljusticereformlab.com/about</loc>
    <changefreq>daily</changefreq>
    <priority>0.75</priority>
    <lastmod>2022-07-04</lastmod>
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      <image:title>About - Why a Reform Lab?</image:title>
      <image:caption>There’s a lot of interest in criminal justice reform right now, and for good reason: our criminal justice systems—federal, state, and local—are broken. But even with this support, meaningful reform has proven elusive.  All too often have the same pathological processes and misguided ideologies that brought us mass incarceration stood between good scholarly ideas and the fight for better criminal justice policies.  A central challenge, then, is to figure out how to forge a tighter connection between what our research teaches us and the criminal justice decisions we see being made on a day-to-day basis.  The Criminal Justice Reform Lab explores pathways of, and possibilities for, overcoming this challenge through a multidisciplinary approach that involves ongoing research, incubation, experimentation, and collaboration.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>About - How does the Reform Lab operate?</image:title>
      <image:caption>The Reform Lab is run by its founder, Professor Michael Serota, with the indispensable assistance of co-student directors James Purdon and Lilly Harris.  The Reform Lab is currently housed within Loyola Law School and affiliated with the Academy for Justice at the ASU Sandra Day O’Connor School of Law. For more information, please see Our Team page.</image:caption>
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      <image:title>About</image:title>
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