O'Neill School at IUPUI
801 W. Michigan Street
BS 4054
Indianapolis, IN
46202
Biography
Dr. Caroline M. Bailey’s research interests include race, ethnicity, historical context, victimization, and social control across a number of settings, including the criminal justice system and the school system. Particularly, her work examines factors that are related to disparate outcomes for people of color in victimization and mechanisms of social control, such as incarceration and school discipline. Her work has appeared in Crime and Delinquency and Race and Justice, among other academic journals.
Education
- Ph.D., Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University, 2020
- M.S., Criminology and Criminal Justice, Florida State University, 2016
- B.A., Criminal Justice and Sociology, University of Georgia, 2014
Highlights
- Ruth D. Peterson Fellow for Racial and Ethnic Diversity, Florida State University College of Criminology and Criminal Justice (2019)
- McKnight Fellow, Florida State University College of Criminology and Criminal Justice (2016)
Selected Intellectual Contributions
- “Sentencing Departures and Female Defendants: Assessing the Effects of Racial and Ethnic Threat,” (with P. Warren, J. Cochran, R. Shields, E. Steward and B. Feldmeyer) Crime & Delinquency (2019)
- “NetWidening in Schools? The Collateral Consequences of Safe Schools Expenditures for Suspension Rates,” (with C. Hughes, P. Warren, E. Stewart) Race and Justice (2019)