People - Wayne State University



WAYNE STATE UNIVERSITY

Professional Record

Date Prepared: 2/24/2017

NAME: MARVIN ZALMAN

Soc. Sec.: available on request

Office: 2283 Fac/Admin Bldg.

(313) 577-6087

E-MAIL: aa1887@wayne.edu

DEPARTMENT/COLLEGE: Criminal Justice/Liberal Arts & Sciences

RANK & DATE: Full Professor/August 1992

Appointed as Associate Professor with Tenure: August 25, 1980

DATE & PLACE OF BIRTH: 9 January 1942, Bronx, New York CITIZENSHIP: United States of America

EDUCATION:

High School: Lindenhurst H.S., Lindenhurst, N.Y.; Richmond Hill H.S., Richmond Hill N.Y., 1959

Baccalaureate: Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y.,1963 (maj.: History)

Graduate: Brooklyn Law School, Brooklyn, N.Y., Ll.B. 1966 [J.D.1967]

State University of New York at Albany, M.A. 1971

State University of New York at Albany, Ph.D.1977

Dissertation: The Distribution of Power in Sentencing; Dissertation Committee Chair: Donald J. Newman

LICENSURE: New York Bar, 1966 (formally retired from practice under NY rules).

FACULTY APPOINTMENTS AT OTHER INSTITUTIONS:

Ahmadu Bello University, Zaria, Nigeria, Law Lecturer, 1967-1969

Michigan State University, Assistant Professor, 1971-1978

Michigan State University, Associate Professor, 1978-1980

Visiting Fellow, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University, 1996-1997

PROFESSIONAL SOCIETY MEMBERSHIPS:

Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

American Society of Criminology

BIOGRAPHICAL CITATIONS:

Who's Who In American Law, 2nd Edition, 1979

Who's Who in American Law, 1996, 9th Edition

Who's Who in American Law, 1998, 10th Edition

Who’s Who in American Law, 14th Edition, 2005-2006

Who’s Who in American Law, 15th Edition, 2007-2008

Who’s Who in American Education, 8th Edition, 2007-2008

Who's Who in the Midwest, 1982

Who’s Who in America, 58th Edition, 2004

Who’s Who in America, 59th Edition, 2005

Who’s Who in America, 60th Edition, 2006

Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers, 2004, 8thEd.

Who’s Who Among America’s Teachers, 2005, 9thEd.

Who’s Who in The World, 24th Edition, 2007

2013 State University of New York, School of Criminal Justice, Distinguished Alumni Award and graduate student commencement speaker.

Signature: Marvin Zalman ________________________________________ February 24, 2017

I. TEACHING

A. Years at Wayne State: Since 1980.

B. Years at Other Universities:

Ahmadu Bello University (Faculty of Law, Nigeria): Two (1967-1969)

Michigan State University (School of Criminal Justice): Nine (1971-1980)

C. COURSES TAUGHT AT WAYNE STATE IN LAST FIVE YEARS

1. UNDERGRADUATE

Politics and the Criminal Justice Process (CRJ/PS 3120)

Judicial Process (CRJ 3700)

Constitutional Criminal Procedure (CRJ 5710/ CRJ 4740)

Topics in Justice & Law: Wrongful Convictions (CRJ 5790/ HON 4210; Hon. 4280)

Previously taught: Criminal Law (CRJ 5720); Judicial Process (CRJ 4400) Political Crime, Political Trials (Hon 4210)

2. GRADUATE

Contemporary Criminal Justice (CRJ 7010)

Public Policy and Criminal Justice (CRJ 7200)

Special Topics: Wrongful Convictions (CRJ 7995)

DOCTORAL COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP

Alex Barfield, Peremptory Challenges: An Empirical Test of Perceived Bias in Jury Selection. Economics Department (successfully defended, Winter 2006)

Alec Thompson, Funding Trial Judge Elections, Study of Donors. Political Science Department. (successfully defended, Winter 2003)

Gerald Cliff, Police Leadership Styles and Community Policing. Political Science Department. (successfully defended, 2000-2003)

Danielle Soulliere, Media Presentations of Criminal Justice. Sociology Department. (successfully defended,1998-2001)

Joan Mars; Police Violence and Human Right in Guyana. Sociology Department (successfully defended,1995- 1996)

Political Science Department — G.M. Ross, Judicial Decisionmaking in Environmental Cases. (successfully defended, 1994-1997)

Simon Payaslian, U.S. Foreign Aid and Human Rights Policy During the Reagan Administration: A Geopolitical Conceptualization of Human Rights Policy in a Global Perspective. Political Science Department (successfully defended,1991- 92).

Christine Stephens; Research and Statistic Utilization in Police Departments. Educational Research Department (successfully defended,1989-1990)

Sherry Blakey; The Reliance Upon Perceived Control for the Prediction of Outcome Acceptance Via Behavioral Compliance. Psychology Department. (successfully defended,1986-1990)

MASTER’S THESIS COMMITTEE DIRECTION (Criminal Justice):

LaBreona Stori-Turner Bland, Mass Incarceration in Detroit: A Historical Narrative (Completed Sp/Su 2016)

Laura Rubino, Recording of Custodial Interrogation: Policies and Practices (Completed Sp/Su 2016)

MASTER’S THESIS COMMITTEE MEMBERSHIP (Criminal Justice):

James Gesitman – Topic: Police Response to Stalking (Completed Fall 2003)

Matthew Larson, Public Opinion and Wrongful Convictions (Completed Winter 2010)

MASTER'S ESSAY DIRECTION (Criminal Justice, recent / completed)

Andrew Eppich, Examining Cognitive Biases in Wrongful Conviction Narratives (in progress)

Ashley R. Werry – The Innocence Movement as a Social Movement [Completed Winter 2016]

Dragana Deric – Wrongful Convictions, Misidentification and the Cross-Race Effect [Completed SS 2015]

Lindsay Hamby – Land of the Fearful, Home of the Bound: Roots of American Mass Incorporation [Completed Winter 2015]

Nicole Wolf -- Indigent defense: A Comprehensive Overview of The Crisis and Review of Current Scholarship and Recommended Reform [Winter 2015]

Sheetal Saini (Jassal) – The Decline of the Death Penalty in the United States: The Role of Wrongful Convictions and Innocence [Completed Winter 2014]

Darren Johnson – What Role Does Race Play in Wrongful Conviction Cases: Are Blacks and Other Minorities More Likely To Be Wrongly Convicted Than Whites? [Completed Summer 2014]

Timothy Greer – The Lawyer’s Role in the Prisoner Reentry Process [Completed Fall 2013]

Charice Long – Hollywood Criminal, Famed Criminal, and Actual Criminal [completed, Winter 2013]

Mikyia Aaron – Psychology Effects of Wrongful Conviction [Completed Winter 2012]

Catherine Duch – Wrongful Convictions: Exonerations [completed: Winter 2011]

Sara Vaughn – An Examination of Eyewitness Identification in the Context of Wrongful Conviction: The Expert, the Witness, and the Investigation [completed: Winter 2011]

Kim Higgins – Racial Profiling in Criminal Justice [completed Spring/Summer 2009]

Angie Kiger – Child Sexual Abuse, Child Witnesses & Wrongful Conviction [Winter 2009]

Kellie Bauss – Predicting Arrests in Domestic Violence Incidents [Summer 2008]

Brian Miller – The Law & Practice of Police Automobile Pursuits [Fall 2008]

Lindsay O’Neill – Eyewitness Identification: The Illinois Field Test [Summer 2008]

Richard Troup, Police Interrogations, Miranda, and False Confessions [Winter 2007]

Andrea Bertholdy – Racial Discrimination in Sentencing [Summer 2006]

William Egle – America’s Correctional Crisis: Rehabilitating the System [Fall 2005]

Derrick Mohammad – Political Surveillance by American Law Enforcement [Fall 2004]

Ann M. Stacey – Improving Lineup Procedures Based on Psychological Research [Winter 2004]

Bridgette Burchette - Racism and Police Stops of Motorists: Fourth Amendment Implications [1998]

Delores Jones - The Evolution of Police Administration: Early Reformers to Modern Day Theorists [1998]

E. COURSE OR CURRICULUM DEVELOPMENT

Developed CRJ 7995 - Special Topics - Graduate Seminar in Wrongful Conviction (W. 2013)

Developed CRJ 5790 – Topics in Justice & Law: Wrongful Convictions (2003)

Developed HON 421 Political Crime, Political Trials

Developed CRJ 675 Administrative Law in Criminal Justice

Developed CRJ 701 Contemporary Criminal Justice

Developed PS 312 Politics and Criminal Justice

Developed CRJ 1700 Exploring Miranda v. Arizona: Historical, Legal, Empirical and Ethical Considerations [4] – First Year Seminar

F. COURSE MATERIALS

Developed Coursepack for PS 311 - Politics of Local Justice, Fall 1987

Developed Coursepack for Hon 421 - Political Crime, Political Trials, 1988

Developed Coursepack for PS 635 - Judicial Administration, Fall 1991.

HONORS THESIS DIRECTION

Olga Forshivska, The Supreme Court, Discourse Communities and Legal Interpretation [2015]

Kyle Johnson, The Supreme Court’s Analysis of Juvenile Mental Capacity in Death Penalty and Sentencing Cases [2015]

Veronica Topolewski – False Confessions and Wrongful Convictions [Winter 2010].

Natalie McKenzie – A Look at Eyewitness Identification Procedures and their Influence on Wrongful Convictions [2008]

Brian Lee – Warrantless surveillance, Electronic Surveillance and Data Mining [2008]

UNDERGRADUATE RESEARCH DIRECTION

Sarah Ferriby - Undergraduate Research Project mentor, Project: Analysis of State Appellate Defenders Office prisoner questionnaires regarding forensic testing at the Detroit crime laboratory, Faculty Award, $750 [2013]

II. RESEARCH

A. RESEARCH In Progress, Not Funded

(1) Continuous examination of wrongful convictions and the reform of the criminal justice system; articles, chapters and book on wrongful conviction and the criminal justice system .

(2) Continuous examination of constitutional criminal procedure; various issues in law and criminal justice.

B. FUNDED RESEARCH

1. A Long-range Projection of Michigan's Correctional Population (1987-1991)

Co-principal Investigator: Kenneth Chelst, Department of Operations Research, College of Engineering, WSU; Amount: $68,994; Funding Agency: Michigan Department of Corrections

2. Michigan Arrests and Prison Commitments, 1976-1985

Support Source: College of Urban, Labor & Met. Studies; Summer Research Support Fund: 1988

Amount: $4,000

3. C.O.P.S. (Community Officers Patrolling Streets) Project

Funding Agency: Sub-contract from Michigan State University; Awarded: Sept. 1990 - Sept. 1992

Amount: $22,110

4. "An Evaluation of Two Neighborhood Dispute Resolution Centers in Detroit That Use Different Dispute Resolution Methodologies"; Funding Agency: Center for Peace and Conflict Studies; Summer 1991 stipend research support; Amount: $3,500

5. "Policy Analysis of Physician Assisted Suicide" 1993-1995

Co-PI: John Strate, Political Science; (funded two graduate students); Source: Richard J. Barber Fund, Center for Legal Studies; Amount: $20,000

6. "Justice and Biography"

Summer 1994; Source: College of Liberal Arts: Support for External Funding; Amount: $2,995

7. 1996-97 - Visiting Library Fellowship awarded, Graduate School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University (expenses)

8. Empirical Study of Voir Dire in One County Court

Co-PI: Olga Tsoudis, Criminal Justice; Source: Richard J. Barber Fund, Center for Legal Studies

Amount: $20,000 (Office of Research Supplement: $10,000)

9. Research and Inquiry Grant

Project: Systematic Interview of Judges Concerning Voir Dire and Observations of Voir Dire;

Source: College of Liberal Arts, Wayne State University; Amount: Course Release, Winter 2001

10. WSU Small Grant, Summer 2000, Police and Democracy Project, $1,000.

11. WSU Undergraduate Student Joint Research Project - with James Czarnecki – student awarded $1,000 stipend for a joint research project concerning the political theoretic foundation of democratic policing. 2000-2001.

12. Research and Inquiry Grant – Wayne State University, College of Liberal Arts; Project: Interviews of judges concerning voir dire, and observations of voir dire; Award: Course release, Winter Semester, 2001

13. Survey of Police Chiefs of Large Departments Concerning Interrogation and Confessions Law

Co-PI: Brad Smith, Criminal Justice; Source: Richard J. Barber Fund, Center for Legal Studies

Amount: $16,790 (Awarded May 2004)

14. Undergraduate Research Project, with student Jeanna Hicks, Comparing the Adversarial and Inquisitorial Trial Models; Award to Student: $1,000. (Spring/Summer 2004)

15. Funded: 2004-2005: With Brad Smith, “Police Administrators’ Knowledge and Attitudes Concerning Interrogation Practice and Law” Richard J. Barber Fund for Interdisciplinary Research (WSU, Center for Legal Studies). Award Granted: May 2004, $16,790

16. Funded: 2005-2006, with Brad Smith: “A Survey of Michigan Judges, Lawyers, and Police Officials Concerning Wrongful Convictions.” Richard J. Barber Fund for Interdisciplinary Research (WSU, Center for Legal Studies). Award Granted: May 2005, $12,500.

17. With Brad Smith: Center for Urban Studies, WSU: Questions Accepted for 2005 Statewide Survey — Opinion Questions About Wrongful Conviction – survey conducted by Center for Urban Studies

OTHER GRANT PROPOSALS WRITTEN

1. Michigan Prison Diversion Study [1986]

Written With: Susan Fino, Political Science Department; Sue Smock, Center for Urban Studies; Funding Agency: Michigan Department of Corrections; Amount Requested: $98,227; Not Funded

2. Policy Assumptions Conference [1988]

Funding Agency: Michigan Department of Corrections; Amount Requested: $5,000; Funded (described Below in section IV. F.)

3. Wayne County Jail Population Forecast

Written With: Kenneth Chelst, Ind. Eng/Op. Res.; Mark Neithercut, Center for Urban Studies

Funding Agency: Wayne County Commission; Amount Requested: $31,680; Submitted 1988; Not funded.

4. University Research Grant Program for 1990-91

TITLE: "Longitudinal Policy Analysis of Sentencing and Correctional Population in Michigan, 1971-1990"; AMOUNT: $7,000 (Personal stipend sought: $3,300); Not Funded

5. NIDR GRANT

TITLE: "The Investigation of Critical Issues in Community Justice: The Volunteer Mediator and Second Party Participation"; Co-PI: Fred Pearson, Center for Peace & Conflict Studies; FUNDING AGENCY: National Institute for Dispute Resolution; AMOUNT: $49,960; Submitted: 1992; Not funded

6. ABA Mini-Grant

TITLE: Bibliography for scientific literature relating to Criminal Procedure; Amount: $1,500;

FUNDING AGENCY: American Bar Association Commission on College and University Education

Submitted, Summer 1996; Not funded.

7. Marvin Zalman & Zieva Konvisser (2015). Innocence Movement Advocates and Policy Reform Process: Assessing the Roles and Effectiveness of Innocence Organization Personnel and Exonerees. Submitted to National Science Foundation, Social & Economic Sciences Division: Law & Social Science and Political Science units. Amount: $456,719.00. Duration: Two years. Other participants: Matthew Larson; graduate student Ashley Werry. Not funded

III. PUBLICATIONS

A. SCHOLARLY BOOKS PUBLISHED

MONOGRAPHS

A Heuristic Model of Criminology and Criminal Justice (Chicago: Joint Commission on Criminology and Criminal Justice Education and Standards, 1981).

EDITED VOLUME

Marvin Zalman & Julia Carrano (Eds.) Wrongful Conviction and Criminal Justice Reform: Making Justice (Routledge, 2014).

B. CHAPTERS PUBLISHED

1. AUTHORED

Marvin Zalman (2017). Wrongful Convictions: Comparative Perspectives. In A. Javier Tervino (Ed.). The Cambridge Handbook of Social Problems. Cambridge University Press.

Marvin Zalman and Yuning Wu (2015). The Interrogation of Criminal Suspects in China, In David Walsh, Gavin Oxburgh, Allison Redlich & Trond Myklebust (Eds.), International Developments and Practices in Investigative Interviewing and Interrogation: Vol 2 Suspects (pp. 7-17) (London and New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis).

Nancy Marion & Marvin Zalman, (2014). “Towards a Theory of Innocence Policy Reform.” In Sarah Cooper, (Ed.). Controversies in Innocence Cases in America (pp. 175-196) (UK: Ashgate). [Refereed]

Marvin Zalman , (2014). “Theorizing Wrongful Conviction,” in Allison D. Redlich, James R. Acker, Robert Norris, and Catherine Bonventre, (Eds.). Examining Wrongful Convictions: Stepping Back, Moving Forward (pp. 283-300) (Carolina Academic Press). [Refereed]

Marvin Zalman (2014). “Interrogations, Law and False Confessions,” in Craig Hemmens (ed.). Current Legal Issues in Criminal Justice: Readings, Second Edition (Oxford University Press).

Marvin Zalman & Nancy Marion (2014). “The Public Policy Process and Innocence Reform.” In M. Zalman & J. Carrano, Eds., Wrongful Conviction & Criminal Justice Reform: Making Justice (Routledge).

M. Zalman (2014).“The Detective and Wrongful Conviction,” in M. Zalman & J. Carrano, Eds., Wrongful Conviction & Criminal Justice Reform: Making Justice (Routledge).

M. Zalman & Julia Carrano (2014). An Introduction to Innocence Reform. In M. Zalman & J. Carrano (Eds.), Wrongful Conviction and Criminal Justice Reform: Making Justice (pp. 9-23). New York: Routledge.

M. Zalman & Julia Carrano (2014). Epilogue: The Prospects for Innocence Reform. In M. Zalman & J. Carrano (Eds.), Wrongful Conviction and Criminal Justice Reform: Making Justice (pp.307 -317 ). New York: Routledge.

Marvin Zalman (2013). Edwin Borchard and the Limits of Innocence Reform. In C. Ronald Huff and Martin Killias, eds., Wrongful Conviction and Miscrraiges of Justice : Causes and remedies in North American and European Criminal Justice Systems (New York: Routledge)

Chapters on (1) The Evidence of Blood: Schmerber v. California (1966); (2) Interrogation & Confessions: Miranda v. Arizona (1966); (3) Lineups and Lawyers: U.S. v. Wade (1967); Kirby v. Illinois (1972); U.S. v. Ash (1973) in Craig Hemmens and Rolando del Carmen, eds., The Top 20 Supreme Court Criminal Procedure Cases: Major Decisions on Search and Seizure, Privacy, and Individual Rights (Rowman & Littlefield, 2010).

“Courts and the Challenges of Wrongful Convictions” In G. Larry Mays and Peter R. Gregware, eds., Courts and Justice: A Reader, Fourth Edition (Long Grove, IL: Waveland Press, 2009).

“Notes on the “Adversary System” and Wrongful Convictions ,” in C. Ronald Huff and Martin Killias, eds., Wrongful Conviction: International Perspectives on Miscarriages of Justice (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 2008)

“The Meaning of Miranda Rights and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination,” in Craig Hemmens, ed., Current Legal Issues in Criminal Justice (Los Angeles: Roxbury Press, 2007) 45-58

"Juricide" in David Schultz, ed. Leveraging the Law: Using the Courts to Achieve Social Change, pp. 293-318 (New York: Peter Lang, 1998).

"The Influence of The Courts Task Force Report" in J. Conley, ed. The 1967 President's Crime Commission Report: Its Impact 25 Years Later, pp. 57-79 (Cincinnati, OH: Anderson Publishing Co., 1994).

"The Courts' Response To Police Intervention in Domestic Violence" in Eve S. Buzawa and Carl Buzawa, eds. Domestic Violence: The Changing Criminal Justice Response, 79-110 (Westport, Conn: Auburn House/Greenwood, 1992).

"Mandatory Sentencing Legislation: Myths and Reality" in M. Morash, ed., Implementing Criminal Justice Policies, 61-69 (Sage, 1982).

"The Distribution of Power in Sentencing" in J. Conley, ed., Theory and Research in Criminal Justice: Current Perspectives, pp. 75-90 (Anderson, 1979)

"Legal Aspects of the Health Care of Prisoners," in Key to Health for a Padlocked Society: Design for Health in Michigan Prisons, 85-126 (Lansing, Governor's Office of Health Care and Medical Affairs, 1975)

Encyclopedia Articles

Marvin Zalman (2014). Measuring Wrongful Convictions. In G. Bruinsma & D. Weisburd (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Criminology and Criminal Justice (pp. 3047-3058). New York: Springer.

Marvin Zalman (2014). Wrongful Convictions. In The Encyclopedia of Criminology and

Criminal Justice, ed. Jay Albanese (Wiley-Blackwell).

Marvin Zalman (2012). Bill of Rights, In Wilbur R. Miller, The Social History of Crime and Punishment in America: An Encyclopedia (Sage).

Marvin Zalman (2009). Wrongful Convictions. In J, Mitchell Miller, ed., 21st Century Criminology: A Reference handbook (pp. 842-850) (Los Angeles: Sage)

D. JOURNAL ARTICLES PUBLISHED

1. REFEREED ARTICLES

Zalman, Marvin and Matthew Larson (2015/2016). Elephants in the Station House: Serial Crimes, Wrongful Convictions, and Expanding Wrongful Conviction Analysis to Include Police Investigation. Albany Law Review, 79(3) 941-1044.

Marvin Zalman and Ralph Grunewald (2015). Reinventing the Trial: The Innocence Revolution and Proposals to Modify the American Criminal Trial, Texas A & M Law Review, 3(2): 189-259.

Marvin Zalman and Julia Carrano (2014). “The Sustainability of Innocence Reform.” Albany Law Review, 77, 955-1003.

Yuning Wu and Marvin Zalman (2013), “Wrongful Conviction in China: Analyzing the Scholarship,” Crime and Criminal Justice International, 21(3), 1-44.

Marvin Zalman (2012). Qualitatively Estimating the Incidence of Wrongful Convictions. Criminal Law Bulletin: 48(2), 221-279.

Marvin Zalman (2012). “Criminology: Wrongful Convictions.” In Oxford Bibliographies in Criminology. Ed. Richard Rosenfeld. New York: Oxford University Press, (Series: Oxford Bibliographies Online).

Marvin Zalman, Matthew Larson, and Brad Smith, Citizens’ Attitudes Toward Wrongful Convictions,” Criminal Justice Review 37(1):51-69 [published online 8 December 2011 DOI: 10.1177/0734016811428374]

Marvin Zalman, An Integrated Justice Model of Wrongful Convictions, Albany Law Review 74:1466-1524 (2011)

Cited, relied on and quoted for holding in State v. Roberts, 134 Ohio St.3d 459, 463, 983 N.E.2d 334 (2012).

Brad W. Smith, Marvin Zalman, and Angie Kiger, How Justice System Officials View Wrongful Conviction” Crime & Delinquency 57(5): 663-685 (2011) (Online First, May 8, 2009).

Marvin Zalman, Brad Smith and Angie Kiger, “Officials’ Estimates of the Incidence of ‘Actual Innocence’ Convictions, Justice Quarterly 25 (1):72-100 (2008).

Marvin Zalman and Brad W. Smith, “The Attitudes of Police Executives Toward Miranda and Interrogation Policies,” Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 97(3):873-942 (2007) [criminology section]

Marvin Zalman, “The Search for Criminal Justice Theory: Reflections on Kraska’s Theorizing Criminal Justice,” Journal of Criminal Justice Education, 18 (1):163-181 (2007)

Marvin Zalman, “Criminal Justice System Reform and Wrongful Conviction: A Research Agenda,” Criminal Justice Policy Review, 17(4):468-492 (2006)

Reprinted in Stan Stojkovic, John Klofas, and David Kalinich, The Administration and Management of Criminal Justice Organizations: A Book of Readings, Fifth Edition (Long Grove, Illinois: Waveland Press, 2010).

Marvin Zalman and Olga Tsoudis, “Plucking Weeds from the Garden: Lawyers Speak About Voir Dire, Wayne Law Review 51(1):163-448 (2005).

Marvin Zalman, “Cautionary Notes on Commission Recommendations: A Public Policy Approach To Wrongful Convictions,” Criminal Law Bulletin 41(2):169-94 (2005)

John Strate, Marvin Zalman and Denis J. Hunter, “Physician-Assisted Suicide and the Politics of Problem-Definition,” Mortality 10(1): 23-41(2005)

John Strate, Timothy Kiska, Marvin Zalman,” Who Favors Legalizing Physician-Assisted Suicide? The Vote on Michigan’s Proposal B,” Politics and the Life Sciences 20(2):155-163 (2001) [published 2005]

Marvin Zalman, Reading the Tea Leaves of Chavez v. Martinez: The Future of Miranda, Criminal Law Bulletin 40 (4): 299-368 (2004)

John Strate and Marvin Zalman, “Interest Group Lobbying on a Morality Policy Issue: The Case of Physician-Assisted Suicide,” American Review of Politics 24:321-342 (2003)

Marvin Zalman, The Coming Paradigm Shift on Miranda: The Impact of Chavez v. Martinez, Criminal Law Bulletin 39(3):334-52 (2003).

Marvin Zalman and Elsa Shartsis, “A Roadblock Too Far? Justice O’Connor’s Left Turn On the Fourth,” Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice 19(2):182-204 (2003).

Marvin Zalman, Criminal Justice and the Future of Civil Liberties” Criminal Justice Review, 25(2) 181-206 (2000).

Reprinted in Chris Eskridge, Criminal Justice: Comments and Issues, Fourth Edition (Roxbury Press 2003).

Marvin Zalman, Fleeing From the Fourth Amendment, Criminal Law Bulletin 36(2):129-47 (2000).

Marvin Zalman, Legal Genre and Assisted Suicide, Social Pathology 5(1):37-61 (1999).

Marvin Zalman, John Strate, Denis Hunter and James Sellars, Michigan's Assisted Suicide Three Ring Circus, Ohio Northern University Law Review 23(3):863-968 (1997)

Marvin Zalman and John Strate, Last Rights: Assisted Suicide and the Judicial Process, Criminal Law Bulletin 33(3):205-25 (April 1997).

Susan P. Fino, John M. Strate, and Marvin Zalman, Paging Dr. Death: The Political Theater of Assisted Suicide in Michigan, Politics and the Life Sciences 61(1):87-103 (March 1997).

Marvin Zalman, Judges In Their Own Case: A Lockean Analysis of Drug Asset Forfeiture, Criminal Justice Review, 21(2):197-230 (Autumn 1996)

Marvin Zalman, The Relationship Between Euthanasia and Suicide in the Netherlands: A Time Series Analysis, 1950-1990 (with Steven Stack), Social Science Quarterly 77(3):577-593 (Dec. 1996)

Marvin Zalman, Reflections on Christopher Smith's Article "Teaching the Irrelevance of Law on Criminal Procedure," Journal of Criminal Justice Education 7(1):59-63 (1996).

Marvin Zalman and Maurisa Gates, Rethinking Venue in Light of the "Rodney King" Case: An Interest Analysis, Cleveland State Law Review 41 (2): 215-277 (1993).

Marvin Zalman, Wayne County Jail Inmates v. Wayne County Sheriff: The Anatomy of a Lawsuit, The Prison Journal LXXI (1): 4-23 (1991) (requested article).

Larry Siegel and Marvin Zalman, "Cultural Literacy" in Criminal Justice: A Preliminary Assessment, Journal of Criminal Justice Education 2(1): 15-44 (1991) (invited article).

Marvin Zalman and Larry Siegel, The Psychology of Perception, Eyewitness Identification, and the Lineup Criminal Law Bulletin 27(2):159-176 (Mar/Apr 1991).

Marvin Zalman, Sentencing In a Free Society: The Failure of the President's Crime Commission To Influence Sentencing Reform, Justice Quarterly, 4:545-569 (1987).

Marvin Zalman, Appellate Review of Sentences and the Antinomy of Law Reform, Detroit College of Law Review, 1983: 1513-1523 (requested article).

Marvin Zalman and Micheal Falvo, Criminal Procedure - 1983 Annual Survey of Michigan Law, Wayne Law Review 30:479-587 (1983).

Marvin Zalman, The Future of Criminal Justice Administration and its Impact Upon Civil Liberties, Journal Of Criminal Justice, 8: 275-286 (1980).

Marvin Zalman, Making Sentencing Guidelines Work: A Response to Professor Coffee, Georgetown Law Journal 67:1005-1021 (1979).

Marvin Zalman, The Rise and Fall of the Indeterminate Sentence, Wayne Law Review,

Parts I & II, 24:45-94 (1977).

Parts III & IV, 24:857-937 (1978).

Parts I and II reprinted in Kermit L. Hall, ed., Police, Prison, and Punishment: Major Historical Interpretations (Vol. 13 of United States Constitutional and Legal History series) (New York: Garland Publishing, 1987)

Marvin Zalman and Jan Palmer, People v. Tanner: A Legal and Empirical Impact Study in Sentencing, New England Law Review 14:82-118 (1978).

Marvin Zalman, A Commission on Model of Sentencing, Notre Dame Lawyer 53:266-290 (1977).

Marvin Zalman, The Federal Anti-Riot Act and Political Crime: The Need for Criminal Law Theory, Villanova Law Review 20:897-937 (1975).

Marvin Zalman, Prisoners' Rights to Medical Care, Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology and Police Science 63:185-199 (1972).

H. BOOK REVIEWS PUBLISHED

1. ACADEMIC JOURNALS

BOOK REVIEW ESSAYS

Civil Rights and Criminal Justice, Journal of Criminal Justice Education 7(1):177-98 (1996).

von Hirsch, Knapp and Tonry, The Sentencing Commission and Its Guidelines, in Criminal Justice Review 13(1): 48-52 (1989).

BOOK REVIEWS

Imprisoned by the past: Warren McCleskey and the American death penalty, Criminal Justice Review, 0734016815596042, first published on August 10, 2015

James R. Acker and Allison D. Redlich, Wrongful Conviction: Law, Science, and Policy (Durham, North Carolina: Carolina Academic Press, 2011 xvii, 640 pp.; ISBN 978-1-59460-753-0) in Criminal Justice Review 37: 402-404 (September 2012).

Truth Machine: The Contentious History of DNA Fingerprinting, by Michael Lynch, Simon A. Cole, Ruth McNally, and Kathleen Jordan. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2008. In Law & Politics Book Review Vol. 19 No. 4 (April, 2009) pp.283-287. [An electronic book review published by the Law & Courts section of the American Political Science Association].

Modern Histories of Crime and Punishment, by Markus D. Dubber and Lindsay Farmer, eds. (Stanford, Calif., Stanford University Press, 2007). In Law & Politics Book Review Vol 18, No. 1 (January, 2008), pp. 35-8. [An electronic book review published by the Law & Courts section of the American Political Science Association].

Michael P. Scharf and Gregory S. McNeal, Saddam on Trial: Understanding and Debating the Iraqi High Tribunal, in Law & Politics Book Review, Vol. 17 No. 7 (July 2007), pp. 550-54 [An electronic journal published by The Law and Courts Section of The American Political Science Association]

Austin Sarat and Patricia Ewick (eds.), Punishment, Politics and Culture (Amsterdam: Elsevier, 2004), in Law & Politics Book Review, Vol. 14 No. 8 (August 2004), pp. 609-618 [An electronic journal published by The Law and Courts Section of The American Political Science Association].

Welsh S. White, Miranda’s Waning Protections: Police Interrogation Practices after Dickerson. (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001) in Justice System Journal 23(2):263-69 (2002).

Richard F. Hamm, Shaping the Eighteenth Amendment: Temperance Reform, Legal Culture, and the Polity, 1880-1920 (Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 1995), in Crime, Gender and Sexuality in Criminal Prosecutions; Criminal Justice History (Annual, vol 17; Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 2002) (Louis A. Knafla, ed.), pp. 198-201.

Neil J. Kressel and Dorit K. Kressel, Stack and Sway: The New Science of Jury Consulting (Westview Press, 2002) in Criminal Justice Review, 27:359-360 (2002).

Jeffrey Ian Ross (Editor) Varieties of State Crime and its Control (Monsey, N. Y: Criminal Justice Press, 2000). In Law and Politics Book Review Vol. 12 (August 2001) pp. 416-422. [An Electronic Periodical Published by the Law and Courts Section of the American Political Science Association]

Leo Katz, Michael S. Moore, and Stephen J. Morse (Editors) Foundations of Criminal Law. (New York: Oxford University Press, 1999. 352 pp.) in The Law and Politics Book Review 9(10):472-475 (1999) [An Electronic Periodical Published by the Law and Courts Section of the American Political Science Association]

R.H. Helmholtz, Charles M. Gray, John H. Langbein, Eben Moglen, Henry E. Smith and Albert W. Alschuler, The Privilege Against Self-Incrimination: Its Origins and Development (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997). (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997). 310 pp., in Criminal Justice Review 23(1):91-91 (Spring 1998).

Barry Latzer, State Constitutional Criminal Law (Deerfield, IL: Clark Boardman Callaghan, 1995 + annual supplements) in The Law and Politics Book Review 7(10): 469-72 (Oct. 1997) [An Electronic Periodical Published by the Law and Courts Section of the American Political Science Association]

Sally Engle Merry & Neal Milner, eds., The Possibility of Justice: A Case Study of Community Mediation in the United States (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1993) in The Law and Politics Book Review 4(5): 67-70 (1994) [An Electronic Periodical Published by the Law and Courts Section of the American Political Science Association]

Dean Champion, ed. The U.S. Sentencing Guidelines: Implications for Criminal Justice (New York: Praeger, 1989), in Criminal Justice Review 16(1): 140-42 (1991).

Mieke Bal, Murder and Difference: Gender, Genre, and Scholarship on Sisera's Death (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988). Tr. Matthew Gumpert. pp. 150. Women & Criminal Justice 2:153-58 (1991).

Thomas J. Gardner, Criminal Law: Principles and Cases, Fourth Edition, Criminal Law Bulletin 26:380-82 (1990).

Kevin Wright, The Great American Crime Myth in Criminal Justice Review 11:47-8 (1986).

Peter Nardulli, ed., The Study of Criminal Courts: Political Perspectives in Federal Probation, 44:81-82 (June, 1980).

Wheeler, Counterdeterrence: A Report on Juvenile Sentencing and Effects of Prisonization in Criminal Justice Review 4:114-116 (1979).

K. INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS FORMALLY PUBLISHED

1. TEXTS/CASEBOOKS

Marvin Zalman, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, Sixth Edition, (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2011)

Marvin Zalman, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, Fifth Edition, (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2007)

Marvin Zalman, Essentials of Criminal Procedure (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2006)

Marvin Zalman, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, Fourth Edition, (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2005)

Marvin Zalman, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, Third Edition, (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2002)

Marvin Zalman and Larry Siegel, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, Second Edition, (Belmont, CA: West/Wadsworth, 1997)

Marvin Zalman and Larry Siegel, Key Cases and Comments on Criminal Procedure 1995 Edition, (Minneapolis/St. Paul, West Publishing, 1996).

Marvin Zalman and Larry Siegel, Key Cases and Comments on Criminal Procedure 1994 Edition, (Minneapolis/St. Paul, West Publishing, 1995).

Marvin Zalman and Larry Siegel, Criminal Procedure: Constitution and Society, (St. Paul, Minn.: West Publishing, 1991)

Marvin Zalman, Cases and Material on the Law of Criminal Procedure in the Northern States of Nigeria (Zaria, Nigeria: Ahmadu Bello University, 1969)

L. PAPERS PRESENTED

1. INVITED OR REFEREED NATIONALLY OR INTERNATIONALLY

Invited International Conference – Marvin Zalman, The organizational, political and social basis of innocence reform in the United States. A paper presented at the International Conference on Prevention of Wrongful Convictions, organized by Renmin University of China, held at Changchun, Jilin Province, China, Aug, 6-8, 2012.

CONFERENCE PAPERS: NATIONAL CONFERENCES

M. Zalman, Reflections and Critique of Leo, A Criminology of Wrongful Conviction, Ten Years Later. American Society of Criminology, Washington, DC, November 2015.

Marvin Zalman & Ralph Grunewald, “Reinventing the Trial: The Innocence Revolution and Proposals to Modify the American Criminal Trial.” Innocence Network Meeting, Orlando, FL, May, 2015.

Marvin Zalman & Ralph Grunewald, “Reinventing the Trial: Evaluating Proposals to Modify the American Criminal Trial In the Wake of the Innocence Revolution.” American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, November 2014.

Marvin Zalman, Roundtable participant: “Methodological Approaches to Post-Conviction Review.” American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, November 2014.

Marvin Zalman, “The Truth Revolution: Habeas Corpus and Wrongful Convictions.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Philadelphia, March 2014

Marvin Zalman & Yuning Wu. “The Correlates of Wrongful Convictions: Exploring the National Registry of Exonerations Data.” American Society of Criminology, Atlanta, 2013

Marvin Zalman & Yuning Wu (2012). Wrongful Convictions in Three Countries: A Comparative Political and Legal Analysis, Innocence Network Meeting. Charlotte, North Carolina. April 20, 2013

Marvin Zalman and Yuning Wu, Wrongful Convictions in China: A Preliminary Exploration, American Society of Criminology, Chicago, Il, November 2012.

Marvin Zalman, Author Meets Critics: Life After Death Row: Exonerees' Search for Community and Identity (Authors: Saundra Westervelt and Kimberly J. Cook). American Society of Criminology, Chicago, Il, November 2012.

Marvin Zalman, Police Culture and innocence Reform, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, New York City, March 2012

Marvin Zalman, When the Supreme Court Speaks: Hudson v. Michigan and the Knock-and-Announce Doctrine, American Society of Criminology, Washington D.C., November 2011.

Marvin Zalman, “Can Criminologists Handle Legal Scholarship?” [Roundtable, The State of Wrongful Conviction Scholarship – The Past, Present, and Future of Wrongful Conviction Scholarship], American Society of Criminology, Washington, D.C., November 2011.

Marvin Zalman, Critic, “Author Meet Critics, Book: Brandon Garritt, Convicting the Innocent: Where Criminal Prosecutions Go Wrong.” American Society of Criminology, Washington, D.C., November 2011.

Marvin Zalman, “Three Innocence Reforms.” 2011 Annual Innocence Network Meeting, University of Cincinnati Law School, Cincinnati, OH.

Panel Chair: Wrongful Conviction: Canadian and US Perspectives

Marvin Zalman, An Integrated Justice Model for Studying Wrongful Conviction Reforms, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Toronto, March 2011

Panel Chair: Research on Wrongful Conviction

Marvin Zalman, A Postscript on the Incidence of Wrongful Convictions, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Toronto, March 2011

Panel Chair: Wrongful Conviction, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, San Diego, February 2010.

Panel Chair: Wrongful Conviction, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, San Diego, February 2010.

Marvin Zalman, Exploring Wrongful Convictions Through Case Studies, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, San Diego, February 2010

Marvin Zalman, Critic, Author Meets Critics: Author; Book: Tom Wells & Richard Leo, The Wrong Guys: Murder, False Confessions, and the Norfolk Four (New York: The New Press, 2008). American Society of Criminology, Philadelphia, Nov. 2009

Marvin Zalman, Session Organizer: Author Meets Critics: Author: Frank Baumgartner, The Decline of the Death Penalty and the Discovery of Innocence by Frank R. Baumgartner, Suzanna L. DeBoef, and Amber E. Boydstun (Cambridge University Press, 2008); CRITICS: Jeffrey Fagan, Columbia Law School; Marvin Zalman, Wayne State University, Glenn L. Pierce, Northeastern University. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2009.

Marvin Zalman, “Police, the Rule of Law, and Confessions,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2009.

Matthew J. Larson, Brad W. Smith, and Marvin Zalman, “An Examination of Citizens’ Attitudes Regarding Wrongful Convictions,“ Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2009.

Marvin Zalman, Roundtable Participant: “The Future Composition of the Supreme Court and How it Will Affect Their Decisions,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2009.

Marvin Zalman, Roundtable Participant: “Legal Research and Social Science Research: Are They Compatible or Mutually Exclusive?” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2009.

Marvin Zalman “Should Wrongful Conviction Be Taught in a Criminal Justice Program?”

American Society of Criminology Annual Meeting, Atlanta, Nov 2007

Marvin Zalman and Richard Janikowski, “Jurisprudential Themes in Criminal Justice” American Society of Criminology Annual Meeting, Atlanta, Nov 2007

Marvin Zalman, Roundtable Leader and Presenter: “Establishing a Comprehensive Exoneration Data Base,” 2007 Annual Innocence Network Meeting, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA

Brad Smith, Marvin Zalman & Angie Kiger, “Michigan Officials’ Estimates of the Systematic Causes of Wrongful Convictions,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Seattle, March 2007.

Marvin Zalman “Journalism as Research: Fredric’s Tulsky’s Series on A Flawed Adversary System (“Tainted Trials, Stolen Justice”) in the San Jose Mercury News, January 2006,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Seattle, March 2007.

Marvin Zalman “What Law Teaching and Legal Scholarship Does and Should Contribute to Criminal Justice, Roundtable Presentation,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Seattle, March 2007.

Marvin Zalman, Brad Smith and Angie Kazaleh, “Officials’ Estimates of the Prevalence of Wrongful Convictions,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, March 2006, Baltimore.

Marvin Zalman, “ Wrongful Conviction and Criminal Justice System Reforms,” American Society of Criminology, Nov. 2005, Toronto

Marvin Zalman and Brad Smith, “Police Attitudes Regarding Interrogation and Confessions: Preliminary Results,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting (Chicago, March 2005)

Marvin Zalman, “The Adversary Jury Trial and Wrongful Conviction “ American Society of Criminology Annual Meeting (Nashville, Nov. 2004)

Marvin Zalman, “A Century of Concern: Wrongful Conviction in English and American Culture, 1890-1990,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences Annual Meeting, Las Vegas, Nevada, March 2004.

Marvin Zalman, “The End of the Miranda Regime and the Need for State Interrogation Policy.” American Society of Criminology Annual Meeting – Denver – November 2003

Marvin Zalman “Prisoners as Citizens,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 2003.

John Strate and Marvin Zalman, “Interest Group Lobbying on a Morality Policy Issue: The Case of Physician Assisted Suicide in Michigan,” Association for Politics and the Life Sciences, Montreal, Aug, 2002.

Marvin Zalman and Elsa Shartsis, “Explaining Justice O’Connor’s Fourth Amendment Swing to the Center: Of Voting Records, Case-By-Case-Analysis, and a Sophisticated Instinct for the Political Center.” American Society of Criminology, Chicago, November 2002.

Marvin Zalman, The Role of Judges in Voir Dire. American Society of Criminology, November, 2001, Atlanta, Georgia [based on research done under a College of Liberal Arts Research & Inquiry Grant]

Marvin Zalman and Olga Tsoudis, “Attorneys’ Attitudes and Perceptions of Voir Dire: An Exploratory Study,” American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, November 2000.

Marvin Zalman, “Fleeing from the Fourth Amendment,” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 2000.

Marvin Zalman, “Review of Supreme Court Cases: 1998 Term.’ Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, New Orleans, Louisiana, March 2000.

Marvin Zalman and Olga Tsoudis, “Plucking Weeds Out of the Garden” – Lawyers on Jury Selection.” Law & Society Association. Chicago, May 1999.

Marvin Zalman, Review of Supreme Court Cases in the 1998 Term. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Orlando, Florida, March 1999.

Marvin Zalman, “Legal Genre and Assisted Suicide.” American Society of Criminology. Washington, D.C. November 1998.

Marvin Zalman, Review of Supreme Court Cases in the 1997 Term. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Albuquerque, NM, March 1998.

Marvin Zalman, Roundtable on Jury Nullification. American Society of Criminology. San Diego, CA, November 1997.

Marvin Zalman, “Is There Compassion in Dying?” American Society of Criminology. San Diego, CA, November 1997.

Marvin Zalman, “Defending Terry v. Ohio.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Louisville, Ky., March 1997.

Marvin Zalman, “The Michigan Assisted Suicide Three Ring Circus” (with John Strate, Denis Hunter and James Sellars). American Society of Criminology. Boston, MA. November 1995.

Marvin Zalman, “The Michigan Commission on Death and Dying: Delaying Difficult Policy Choices” (with John Strate, Denis Hunter and James Sellars). American Political Science Association. Chicago, IL. August 1995.

Marvin Zalman, “Understudied Modes of Law and Policy Making: Ad Hoc Study Commissions And the Issue of Assisted Suicide” (with John Strate, Denis Hunter and James Sellars). Law & Society Association. Toronto, Ont. June 1995.

Marvin Zalman, “Euthanasia and Dutch Suicide, 1950-90" (with Steven Stack). American Association of Suicidology, Phoenix, Az, May 1995.

Roundtable Participant: Court Reform Retried: Politics and Public Policy. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 1995.

Roundtable Participant: An Annual Review of Recent United States Supreme Court Decisions Related to Criminal Justice. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 1995.

Roundtable Participant: Role of Law in Criminal Justice. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Chicago, March 1994

Marvin Zalman, “The Constitutional Legitimacy of Mapp and Miranda in a Postmodern Vein.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Chicago, March 1994

Marvin Zalman, “Community and Criminal Procedure.” American Society of Criminology. Phoenix, Nov. 1993.

Roundtable: Theories of Criminal Process. Law & Society Association. Chicago, May 1993.

Marvin Zalman, “Criminal Courts: A Conundrum of Change, 1967-1992,” Panel on President's Crime Commission 25 Years Later. American Society of Criminology. New Orleans, La., Nov. 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “Confessions Made to Undercover Agents: Law. Morality, Public Policy.” American Society of Criminology. New Orleans, La., Nov. 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “The Political Meaning of Jerome Hall's Criminal Law Theory” (panel organizer). American Society of Criminology. New Orleans, La., Nov. 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “A Comparison of Two Neighborhood Mediation Centers in Detroit.” Law & Society Association. Philadelphia, May 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “Notes on the Direction of Criminal Procedure in the Rehnquist Court, With A Focus on the Law of Confessions” Roundtable on Criminal Procedure. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Pittsburgh, Penn. March 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “A Reinterpretation of the Harmless Constitutional Error Doctrine After Arizona v. Fulminante.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Pittsburgh, Penn. March 1992.

Marvin Zalman, “A Review of State Statutes Concerning the Police Role in Domestic Violence.” American Society of Criminology. San Francisco, Ca. November 1991.

Roundtable on the Teaching of Law in Criminal Justice Programs. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Nashville, Tenn., March 1991.

Marvin Zalman, “The Increasing Participation of Older Offenders in Conviction and Imprisonment” (with Kenneth Chelst). American Society of Criminology. Baltimore, Md. November 1990.

Marvin Zalman, “Geographic Felony Sentencing Patterns in Michigan” (With R. John Kinkel and Kenneth Chelst). Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Denver, CO. March, 1990.

Marvin Zalman, “The Courts' Response To Police Intervention in Domestic Violence” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Denver, CO. March, 1990.

Marvin Zalman and Kenneth Chelst, “Felony Sentencing and Prison Commitment Trends in Michigan During the Operation of a Prison Overcrowding Emergency Release Law.” American Society of Criminology. Chicago, Ill. November 1988.

Marvin Zalman, Kenneth Chelst, Thomas Mieczkowski, Christine Galovich & Robert Posner. “The Use of a State Policy Assumptions Conference/Workshop to Elicit Trend Information For a Correctional Forecast Model”. American Society of Criminology. Montreal, Quebec. November 1987.

Marvin Zalman, “The Rule of Law and Political Trials: A Hypothesis from the Hebrew Bible” Law & Society Association. Washington, D.C. June 1987.

Marvin Zalman, “Sentencing In a Free Society: The Failure of the President's Crime Commission To Influence Sentencing Reform - An Assessment.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Orlando, FL. March, 1986.

Marvin Zalman, “Two Cheers for Sentencing Guidelines.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Las Vegas, Nev. April, 1985.

Marvin Zalman, “Capital Punishment by Intravenous Injection: Its Social Basis, Context, and Implications for the Definition of Punishment.” American Society of Criminology. Denver, Col. November, 1983.

Marvin Zalman, “Prison Lawsuits - The Jurisprudence of Power.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. San Antonio, Tex. March, 1983.

(1) Moderator and organizer, Plenary Session on Contemporary Problems Facing the Judicial System, speakers: Edward L. Greenspan, Q.C., John Hagan, Hon. Leslie G. Johnson, Sue Titus Reid; (2) Discussant, Panel on Selected Studies on Sentencing and the Courts. American Society of Criminology. Toronto, Ont. November, 1982.

(1) Marvin Zalman, “The Development of Michigan's Guidelines;” (2) Discussant, Panel on Intellectual Foundations of Social Order and Control. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Louisville, Ky. March, 1982.

(1) “The Theoretical Foundations of Sentencing Guidelines” (co-author: Charles W. Ostrom, Jr.); (2) “Prosecutorial Discretion and the Application of a Mandatory Sentencing Provision” (co-author: Timothy Bynum). American Society of Criminology. Washington, D.C. November, 1981.

Moderator and organizer of Plenary Session on Contemporary Issues in the Judiciary, speakers: Milton Heumann, Richard Sparks, Russell Wheeler. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Philadelphia, Pa. March 1981.

(1) “Criminal Sentencing Patterns in Customary Courts of Northern Nigeria;” (2) “The Impact of the Freedom of Information Act on Corrections” (co-authors: Melinda Swanson and Loren Wright); (3) Discussant, Panel on the ERA Atmosphere - Effects on Sentencing Female Offenders. Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Oklahoma City, Okla. March, 1980.

Marvin Zalman, “The Politics of Sentencing Reform.” Western Political Science Association. Los Angeles, Cal. March 1978.

(1) “The Future of Criminal Justice;” (2) “A Heuristic Typology of Similarities and Differences Between Criminology and Criminal Justice;” (3) “The Research Model for the Michigan Sentencing Guidelines Project and Preliminary Findings” (co-author Charles W. Ostrom, Jr.) Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Cincinnati, Ohio. March 1979.

Marvin Zalman, “Distribution of Power in Sentencing - Theoretical Aspects.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. New Orleans, La. March 1978.

Marvin Zalman, “Indeterminate Sentence Laws - Present, Future and Past.” Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Dallas, Tex. March 1976.

2. INVITED AND/OR REFEREED LOCALLY/REGIONALLY

M. Zalman, Serial Crime and Wrongful Conviction, Society of Active Retirees (S.O.A.R., A WSU affiliated group) Oct., 2015

M. Zalman, Reinventing the Trial, Humanities Center Brown Bag Talk:(Wayne State University, October, 2015)

M. Zalman, From Serial to Serial [From Serial Podcast to Serial Killers as Sources of Wrongful Convictions], Knowledge on Tap (sponsored by CLAS), Jan. 28, 2015.

M. Zalman, The Interrogation of Criminal Suspects in China: A Complex Cultural Process. Humanities Center Brownbag Presentation, Dec. 3. 2014.

M. Zalman, Wrongful Convictions in America. Society of Active Retirees (S.O.A.R., A WSU affiliated group) Oct. 22, 2014

Marvin Zalman “Citizenship Explains Changes in Police Interrogation Practices and Supreme Court Confessions Rulings”, Humanities Center Brown Bag Talk:(Wayne State University, October 28, 2009)

Marvin Zalman, “Seeking Justice for the Wrongly Convicted at Yale: The Influence of Edwin M. Borchard,” Humanities Center Brown Bag Seminar Series (Wayne State University, Jan. 24, 2007)

Marvin Zalman and Mary Shenouda, “The Effects of Wrongful Conviction on the Actually Innocence and the Need for Publically Supported Non-Monetary Assistance,” Michigan Academy of Science, Arts & Letters, (Political Science Section, Oakland University), March 2006.

Marvin Zalman, “The Literature and Film of Wrongful Conviction,” Humanities Center, Brown Bag Seminar Series (Wayne State University, March 3, 2005)

Marvin Zalman, “The Voting Rights of Prisoners” – Michigan Academy of Science, Arts, & Letters (Political Science Section, Holland, Michigan; Hope College), March 2003.

Marvin Zalman, “Convicted Criminals: Citizens or Outlaws” – WSU Humanities Center Fall Symposium on The Meaning of Citizenship (November 2002).

Marvin Zalman and James Czarnecki, “Community Policing and Strong Democracy ,” Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters, (Law Section, University of Michigan, Dearborn, March 2001.

Marvin Zalman, “Criminal Justice and the Future of Civil Rights” Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters (Law Section, Saginaw Valley Sate College, March 2000):

Center for Legal Studies (WSU) – Luncheon Lecture Series – with Olga Tsoudis: “‘Plucking Weeds Out of the Garden’ – Lawyers on Jury Selection” (April 1999)

Marvin Zalman, “Incorporation and Biography: The Criminal Justice Experiences of Supreme Court Justices—An Exploration.” Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters, (Law Section, Alma College, February 1998).

Marvin Zalman, “Is There A Common Law Crime of Assisted Suicide? No!” Center for Legal Studies, Luncheon Lectures, Wayne State University, Oct. 16, 1997.

“The Disabled and Assisted Suicide: Dynamics of the Michigan Commission on Death and Dying” (co-author, John Strate), Center for Legal Studies, Wayne State University, December 1, 1994.

Invited Plenary Session Speaker: Penal Policy in the 1990s: From Sentencing Guidelines to Prison Overcrowding - Towards a Rational and Coherent Penal Policy. Midwestern Criminal Justice Association. Chicago. Ill. October 1988.

Recent Developments in Sentencing. Midwestern Association of Criminal Justice Educators, Chicago, Ill. October, 1980.

“Sentencing Power and the Impact of the Tanner Decision.” (co-author: Jan Palmer) Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Mich. April 1975.

M. INVITED SEMINARS OR LECTURES

Wrongful Conviction and the Future of American Criminal Justice, Distinguished Lecture Series, Department of Criminal Justice, College of Justice and Safety, Eastern Kentucky University, October 2006.

Participant, National Conference on Punishment for Criminal Offenses. This two day conference at Ann Arbor, Michigan was sponsored by The United States Department of Justice and Bowling Green State University. I delivered an original paper entitled "Judges, Public Opinion and Punishment," was a panelist, and participated in the entire program. November, 1987.

Presentation: "The Constitutional Role of Prophets in the Early Israelite Monarchy" - Wayne State University Campus Constitutional Bicentennial Committee. March, 1989.

Plenary Address: Is the Law Dead? The Legal Challenge to Criminal Justice; the Criminal Justice Challenge to the Law, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Boston, March 8, 1995.

N. OTHER SCHOLARLY WORK

“Wrongful Convictions” in J. Mitchell Miller, ed., 21st Century Criminology: A Reference Handbook (Los Angeles: Sage, 2009), pp. 842-50.

Encyclopedia Entry: “Venue” in Encyclopedia of Crime and Justice, Second Edition, Joshua Dressler, editor (Macmillan Reference USA, 2002).

Encyclopedia Entries: “Criminal Justice System”, “Felix Frankfurter”, “Earl Warren” in Encyclopedia of American Law, David Schultz, editor (Facts on File, 2002).

Guest Editor, Social Pathology, Volume 5, Number 1 (September 1999) - on Assisted Suicide.

Guest Editor, Criminal Justice Review, Volume 21, Number 2, pp. 133-250 (Autumn 1996):

Foreword: "The Assault on Rights," pp. 133-38.

IV. SERVICE

A. Administrative Appointments at Wayne State University

Chair, Department of Criminal Justice, 1980-1987 (on leave, Jan-Aug 1984)

Acting Chair, Fall 1998

Interim Chair, Department of Criminal Justice, May 2001- Aug. 2003

Interim Chair, Department of Criminal Justice, Aug. 2007-Aug. 2008

C. Committee Assignments

2. University Committee Membership

* 2014, Promotion & Tenure Committee

* Campus Constitutional Bicentennial Committee (1988-1992)

* Executive Board, Peace and Conflict Studies Center (1985-present).

* Member, Advisory Board, Center for Legal Studies (1994-1996, 1998-2001).

* Member, Criminal Justice Faculty Search Committee (1995) (1996)

* Member, Center for Legal Studies Faculty Search Committee (1996)

* Member, Internal Advisory Committee, WSU State Policy Center (1998-2001).

* Member, 1999 University Research Awards Selection Committee -- Applications for summer grants in the Social and Behavioral Sciences and Law (Reviewed 11 applications) (Winter 1999)

* Reviewer - Graduate-Professional Scholarship, 1999-2000 Competition (under Office of V.P. for Research) (Winter 1999)

* Member, Academic Senate (Curriculum and Instruction Committee) (2001-2004)

3. College/Department/Program Committees Chaired

* Graduate Admission Officer (2002-2004)

* Graduate Admissions Officer (1997 - 2000)

* Member, College Salary Committee (1999-2000)

* Chair, Faculty Recruitment Committee (Policing Position) (1998-1999)

* Member, 1999 University Research Awards Selection Committee -- Applications for summer grants in the Social and Behavioral Sciences and Law

* Reviewer - Graduate-Professional Scholarship, 1999-2000 Competition (under Office of V.P. for Research).

* Director, Criminal Justice Graduate Committee/ Graduate Advisor 1985-1996

* Member, CULMA Search Committee for Dispute Resolution Position (1992-1994).

* Chair, Criminal Justice Planning Committee [The committee presented to the Dean a comprehensive plan, including a detailed curriculum plan, to modify the criminal justice area of study by eliminating it as a Department and creating in its place a multi-disciplinary interdepartmental program within the College of Liberal Arts] (1987-88).

* Member, Criminal Justice Director's Search Committee (1989).

Criminal Justice Department Committees

* Department Honors Program Director (2013-2014)

* Promotion & Tenure Committee, 2013-2014: Yuning Wu

* Promotion & Tenure Committee, 2013-2014: Brad Smith

* Faculty Search Committee (2011)

* Salary Committee (2011-2012, 2012-2013, 2013-2014)

* Personnel and Policy Committee (2011-2012, chair; 2012-2013, chair; 2013-2014, member; 2015-2016)

* Undergraduate Committee (2012-2013)

* Oversee JD/MS degree students.

* Departmental Committees, 2010-2013: Promotion & Tenure, Salary, Personnel and Policy, Alumni Affairs

* Departmental Committees, 2014-2015: Personnel and policy; Salary (2014); Chair Search.

Faculty Liaison, Criminal Justice Alumni Board

Developed proposal for a concurrent JD-MS degree, approved by faculty & forwarded to LawSchool, CLAS; work with law school on progress of program (Winter 2011-Winter 2012)

4. College Committee Membership

*Member, Criminal Justice Chair Search Committee, Winter 2013.

* Member, CLAS Promotion & Tenure Committee, 2011 (filled in for vacancy)

* Member, Executive Board, Peace and Conflict Studies Center (1985-present )

* Member, Review Advisory Panel, Academic Program Review: Political Science Department (Winter 2010)

* Member, CLAS Faculty Council, 2006-2009

* Member, College Salary Committee (2006)

* Member, Chair Search Committee (2002-2003)

* Ad-hoc Committee to Consider Name Change of College (1982).

* Liberal Arts Faculty Council (1991-1994; 1998-2001)

* CLAS Tenure & Promotion Committee (2011)

* Faculty Advisor: Phi Alpha Delta, Pre-Law Fraternity (1994-1996)

D. Positions Held in Professional Associations

Chair (elected) , Law & Public Policy Section, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences (2010-2012); Immediate past Chair (2012-2014).

Executive Counselor, Convener, Organizing Committee, Law & Public Policy Section, ACJS, 2008-2009

Member, Program Committee, Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

- 1999 Annual Meeting - 2004 Annual Meeting - 2007 Annual meeting

- 2010 Annual Meeting - 2013 Annual Meeting

ACJS Experts Directory (Courts & Law) [invited, 2013]

Member (1982-1983) and Chair (1983-1984) of Awards Committee of Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

Chair, Law Section, Michigan Academy of Science, Arts and Letters 1999-2002

Service to the Profession: Miscellaneous

Faculty Promotion Reviews

Reviewed candidates at other Universities for promotion: 2003, 2004, 2007, 2010

Reviewed and evaluated record of full professor for appointment to the rank of Distinguished Professor at a midwestern university [Summer 2011].

Fall 2013— Evaluated records of two associate professors for promotion to full professor at two separate PhD granting criminal justice departments in the eastern portion of the United States; I recommended one for promotion and and recommended that one not be promoted to full professor.

F. Professional Consultation, Community Service

1973: Consultant for the Center for the Administration of Justice, Wayne State University Law School: Judicial Sentencing Seminars / planning and teaching three judicial sentencing seminars three 1 ½ day seminars at Detroit, Marquette, and Grand Rapids. I prepared a sentencing decision experiment using the "decision board" technique developed by Professor Leslie Wilkins. (June-November)

1974: Participant in a moot examination-before-trial for the Michigan State University Medical College.

Consultant for the State of Michigan: Governor's Commission on Prison Health Care; wrote chapter for the Commission's final report (June 1974-June 1975)

1975: Colloquium presentation, College of Human Development (Law Enforcement and Corrections), Pennsylvania State University. Recent Developments in Corrections Law: Intergovernmental Conflicts and the Political Meaning of Corrections Cases. (March)

Consultant to the Michigan Court Executive Training Program on Caseflow Management/Center for the Administration of Justice, Wayne State University Law School, at East Lansing, Mich. The Impact of Legal Rules on Court Delay and the Right of a Speedy Trial. (April)

1977: Consultant to the National Institute of Corrections, Jail Center, Boulder, Col.: taught legal issues component at five NIC/MSU Large Jail Systems seminars for administrators of large jails over course of one year.

1978: Presentation to Criminal Law Section, State Bar of Michigan (Mackinac Island): recent developments in sentencing legislation and research.

Presentation / all-day workshop with the Michigan Parole Board, Lansing, Mich., exploring feasibility of alternate decisionmaking techniques and models (with Charles Ostrom, Jr.), including interface between parole and sentencing in light of 1978 legislative developments. Informal discussions followed each presentation. (August)

Presentation on Sentencing Guidelines to Michigan Trial Judges Association, Boyne Highlands, Mich. (September)

1979: Participant / Section Chair, Sentencing Guidelines Workshop, Cincinnati, Ohio, sponsored by American University Criminal Courts Technical Assistance Project, on feasibility of adopting sentencing guidlines. (March).

Consultant to Sentencing Guidelines Project of the Massachusetts Superior Court. (March)

Consultant to University Research Corporation/National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice/Florida and Maryland. Over a period of two years I joined with an advisory group to offer advice on the implementation of the Multijurisdictional Sentencing Guidelines Program Test Design. Washington D.C. (1979-1981)

Consultant to State of Pennsylvania Sentencing Guidelines Project, to review research procedures and materials. Sponsored by American University Criminal Courts Technical Assistance Project. (November)

1980: Testified to Michigan House of Representatives, Sub-Committee on Community Corrections. Lansing, Mich. (February)

Participant, Sentencing Guidelines Workshop, Washington, D.C.; chaired session on guidelines development; 35 participants from seventeen state sentencing guideline projects, development and implementation issues. Workshop sponsored by American University Criminal Courts Technical Assistance Project. (April)

Panel on Organized Crime, White Collar Crime and the Community, National Institute on Police and Community Relations. East Lansing, Mich. (October)

1981: External Reviewer. Center for Studies in Criminal Justice, St. Cloud State University, St. Cloud, Minn.; not an accreditation review. (April)

Member, Public Safety and Justice Committee, New Detroit Inc. (June 1981-1984)

Principal investigator with Keith Leenhouts on educational development/action grant: Master's Degree Program in Juvenile and Criminal Justice. Total funding: $80,000 ($60,000 from the Hudson-Webber Foundation, $10,000 from the Skillman Foundation and $10,000 from the MacGregor Fund). Grant designed to place graduate and undergraduate students in agencies that utilize citizen volunteers for counseling minor offenders and to develop a program for the professional education of managers of volunteers in private agencies, probation departments, juvenile courts and misdemeanant courts. (June 1981-May 1984)

Member, Sentence Review Committee. Appointed by Chief Justice Mary Colemen of the Michigan Supreme Court to a committee of 15, chaired by Judge Daniel Walsh of the Court of Appeals. Committee examined concept of appellate review of sentences in criminal cases and submitting a report to the Supreme Court. (July 1981-July 1982)

Presentation in a half-day Professional Seminar at the American Correctional Association, 111th Congress, on determinate sentencing. Miami, Florida. (August)

1982: Peer Reviewer for National Institute of Justice.

External Reviewer, for Louisiana Board of Regents, of criminal justice programs and departments at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, La.; McNeese State University, Lake Charles, La.; Southern University, Baton Rouge, La.; Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, La.; and the University of Southwestern Louisiana, Lafayette, La. Review team included Dr. Robert Culbertson and Dr. Price Foster. The review included site-visits on each campus, with appropriate interviews, and the writing of reports and recommendations. (February-March)

Policy Team Member, Michigan Prison Overcrowding Project (P.O.P.); policy study, development and advisory group funded by National Institute of Corrections and the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation, to Michigan House of Representatives, Committee on Corrections. Policy Team included legislators, judges, the Director of the Department of Corrections, executive branch officials, attorneys representing prosecution and defense, representatives of law enforcement and citizens knowledgeable in corrections, the courts and community alternatives. The Michigan P.O.P. was one of four state projects, including South Carolina, Colorado, and Oregon, that were of general as well as local application. As Sentencing Committee Chair, I drafted a model sentencing guidelines law(May 1982-1984)

Article peer reviewer, Journal of Criminal Justice.

1983- Coordinator, Criminal Justice Forum; with Detroit Police Department; funded by $10,000 Hudson-Webber Foundation grant; executive speaker's forum: Patrick Murphey, Police Foundation; Prof. Alfred Blumstein, Carnegie-Mellon University; Justice Richard Neely, West Virginia Sup. Ct.; Leonard Gilman, U.S. Attorney, Chief William Hart, DPD; Chief Atkins Warren, Gainsville, Fla. PD; George Sunderland, Security Advisor, Retired Persons Association; and Gordon Kettler, Director of Security, General Motors Corporation (January- December)

Member, Board of Directors, Community Treatment Center (CTC), federal halfway house.

Op-ed article, The Detroit News, "Bringing Equity to Sentencing" (October)

Testified at Michigan Senate Judicial Committee hearings on Sentencing Guidelines bill. (October)

Lecture at the Detroit Jewish Community Center, "Sentencing Disparity and Guidelines - Injustice and Promise" in the Fall Lecture Series of the Senior Adult Department (October)

Moderator, Judicial Panel of the Michigan Correctional Association annual meeting on Impact of the Courts.

1984: Peer Reviewer, National Institute of Justice.

Speech on "Prison Overcrowding - The Problems and Solutions" at Franklin Club Apartments, Wayne State University Faculty Lecture Series (October)

Peer reviewer, Justice Quarterly

1985: Provide 12 hours of training on Corrections Law to jail officers at Macomb County (Michigan) Jail. (January)

Peer Reviewer, Justice Quarterly, Criminal Justice Policy Journal

1986: Talk to Hillel Foundation, WSU: "A Jewish Criminologist's Perspective on Capital Punishment." (January)

Op-ed article, The Detroit News, "Death Penalty: More Harm Than Good" (June)

Op-ed article, The Detroit News, "Can We Cure Judicial Corruption?" (December)Reprinted in Michigan Bar Journal, vol. 66, no. 5, pp. 365-66 (May 1987.

Peer Reviewer, Justice Quarterly

1987: Organized and Presented at Michigan Policy Assumptions Conference. A one and on-half day conference of executive level officers from various criminal justice agencies, courts and legislature, to gather available data on operational levels of personnel, budget and performance in agencies and to determine anticipated changes. Focus on prison overcrowding problem. Funded by the Michigan Legislature and Department of Corrections. (March)

Guest Lecture: "Criminal Justice Approaches to Conflict" for PCS 200, Introduction to Peace and Conflict Studies, Wayne State University (September)

Article Peer Reviewer, Criminal Justice Review, Judicature, Justice Quarterly.

1988: Panelist, "Alternatives to Incarceration: How Feasible and Fair?" Sponsored by The League of Women Voters of Oakland County; Co-Panelists: Judge Stephen C. Cooper, 46th District Court and Oakland County Sheriff John F. Nichols. (April).

For Michigan Department of Corrections – organized and presented at the Jail/Prison Population and Policy Conference and Workshop, funded by a $5,000 grant. Developed 50 page briefing book for participants, which included graphics indicating recent trends in criminal justice and correctional processing. Workshop is mandated by legislation and is designed to enhance the awareness of key policymakers and improve correctional planning and policy. Participants included legislators, judges, officials of the Department of Corrections, the Michigan Sheriff's Association, the Department of State Police, Office of Management and Budget, the State Appellate Defender's Office, academicians, and officers of the Michigan Council on Crime and Delinquency. Preparation for the conference occurred throughout the Summer. (September).

Op-ed article, The Detroit News, "Candidates Ignore Real Crime Issues," (November).

Article Peer Reviewer, Criminal Justice Review, Judicature, Justice Quarterly, Law & Society Review.

1989: Peer Review Panel Member for National Institute of Justice. (March)

Panelist, Symposium on "Communities, Crime and the Criminal Justice System in Michigan," sponsored by the American Friends Service Committee, at the Wayne State University Law School; spoke on a rational penal system. (April)

Consultant, United States Sentencing Commission, Washington, D.C., engaged in review and amendments of the federal sentencing guidelines. (April)

Peer Review Panel Member for National Institute of Justice. (July)

Conference Organizer and Panelist: 1989 Michigan Prison Population and Policy Conference. Conference similar to 1988 conference / held in conjunction with meeting of the Michigan House of Representatives' Speaker's Ad Hoc Committee on Criminal Justice (Rep. Pat Gagliardi, Chair). Five, 10 page data reports, authored by Zalman and Chelst, WSU on: Crime and Arrest Trends; Sentencing Trends, Increasing Participation of Older Offenders in Conviction and Imprisonment; Regional Sentencing Patterns , and Correctional Populations. (September)

TESTIMONY TO THE LEGISLATURE I testified twice before the Michigan House of Representatives' Speaker's Ad Hoc Committee on Criminal Justice (Rep. Pat Gagliardi, Chair) on sentencing trends and on the need for a more comprehensive research effort in criminal justice by the State. Testimony was offered on September 28, 1989 and on November 2, 1989, proposing a criminological and criminal justice research capacity and an outline for such a research unit

Article Peer Reviewer, Criminal Justice Review, Criminology, Judicature, Justice Quarterly, Law & Society Review.

1990: Conference Organizer, to Michigan Department of Corrections: Delphi-type questionnaire for a key group of legislators and correctional policy makers, followed up by a focus-group type of workshop. Results available for policy study of sentencing and corrections in Michigan. Conference results utilized by the Research Division of the Michigan Department of Corrections in formulating population projections.

Article Peer Reviewer: Criminal Justice Review, Justice Quarterly.

1991: Appointed to Civil Justice Expense and Delay Reduction Advisory Committee of the Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan by Chief Judge Julian Abele Cook. (March 1991 to March 1992).

Prepared "A Brief Guide to Crime and Criminal Justice Data" for the Detroit Orientation Institute, College of Urban, Labor and Metropolitan Affairs, Wayne State University (March).

Op-ed article, The Detroit News, "Sentencing laws wasteful, bizarre" (March)

Book Reviewer for State University of New York Press: Thomas Church and Milton Heumann, Monetary Incentives and Policy Reform in the Criminal Courts. (April).

Peer Reviewer for National Institute of Justice. (July)

Television interview by Rev. James Lyons, on cable TV series on the Holocaust, "Echoes of the Past." Segment entitled "Above, Beyond, Within the Law." (October).

Presentation to brown-bag luncheon seminar of Center for Peace & Conflict Studies, WSU on "Neighborhood Mediation in Detroit." (October)

Peer Reviewer: Criminal Justice Review, Journal of Criminal Justice Education, Judicature, Journal of Crime and Justice

1992: Peer Reviewer: Criminal Justice Review, Journal of Crime and Justice

1993: Peer Reviewer: Criminal Justice Review

1994: Volunteer Community Mediator

Panel Coordinator, American Bar Association conference on Science and the Law. Detroit. April 1995.

Peer Reviewer: Criminal Justice Review, Justice Quarterly

1996 - 2002: Peer Reviewer: Crime & Delinquency; Criminal Justice Review; International Criminal Justice Review, Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice; Journal of Crime & Justice

2002 Member, external review committee. Review of Criminal Justice Department for accreditation at Georgia State University (Atlanta) (June 2002)

2002-2003: Consultantship for law firm regarding police disciplinary action based on constitutionality of police officer’s behavior.

2006 – Review NIJ Technical Report conducted by NORC (April 2006)

2007 – Reviewed Proposal for National Science Foundation on Forensic Science and Wrongful Convictions.

Prepared and delivered lecture for MCOLES (Michigan Council on Law Enforcement Training) / Lake Superior State University: “The Scientific Basis of Police Investigation, Eyewitness Identification,” Police Advanced Training Seminar (May)

2009 – Reviewed research proposal for the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (October).

2010 – Michigan Academy of Science, Arts & Letters, judged paper for Cohn Prize (February)

Reviewed research proposal for the National Science Foundation, Wrongful Conviction: A Comprehensive Analysis of DNA and Non-DNA Exonerations (March).

National Institute of Justice - Spring-Summer 2010 – Peer Reviewer / seven proposals in the courts/sentencing area (Consultantship).

National Institute of Justice - Sept. 2010 – invited participant, International Perspectives on Wrongful Convictions Workshop

2012 – National Science Foundation Review of proposals for study of “Factors Contributing to Compliance with the Exclusionary Rule” (September 2012).

Presentation on wrongful conviction at meeting sponsored by Just Justice

(just_justice_Zero@) at Grosse Pointe Unitarian Church, March 25, 2012 at panel to raise awareness regarding proposed Wrongful Imprisonment Compensation Act, with Sen. Steven Bieda and Prof. David Moran, University of Michigan Law school.

Advisor, Proving Innocence, available at

2013 – Presentation on Developing Issues Under the Fourth Amendment, D. Augustus Straker Bar Association, Troy, MI (April)

Advisor, Proving Innocence, available at

2014 - Advisor, Proving Innocence, available at

Grant Application Review, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (January).

Journal Peer Reviewer 2002-present

Crime & Delinquency

Criminal Justice and Behavior

Criminal Justice Review

Criminal Justice: The International Journal of Policy & Practice

Criminal Justice Policy Review

Criminal Justice Studies: A Critical Journal of Crime, Law and Society

Criminology & Public Policy

International Criminal Justice Review

Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice

Journal of Crime & Justice

Journal of Criminal Justice Education

Journal of Qualitative Criminal Justice

Justice System Journal

Justice Quarterly

Law & History Review

Law & Social Inquiry

Law & Society Review

Politics and the Life Sciences

Psychology, Public Policy & Law

Punishment & Society

Race and Justice

Social Science Journal

Sociological Quarterly

G. JOURNAL EDITORIAL ACTIVITY

2. Editorial Board Memberships

Criminal Justice Policy Review (2005- present)

Criminal Law Bulletin (1996-present)

Criminal Justice Review (1988 - 2014)

Journal of Crime and Justice (1999 - 2001)

Justice System Journal (2005-2012)

Deputy Editor, Justice Quarterly (1984-1987)

3. Other

Guest Editor, Social Pathology, Volume 5, Number 1 (Winter 1999) - on Assisted Suicide.

Guest Editor, Criminal Justice Review, Volume 21, Number 2, pp. 133-250 (Autumn 1996); Authored Foreword: "The Assault on Rights," pp. 133-38.

H. OTHER PROFESSIONALLY RELATED SERVICE

1984 (January-August): Executive Director, New York Committee on Sentencing Guidelines (work documented in P. Griset, Determinate Sentencing: The Promise and the Reality of Retributive Justice. Albany, N.Y.: State University of New York Press, 1991).

1979-1982: Sentencing Guidelines Development Committee Michigan Supreme Court (participated in policy group that established first set of Michigan Felony Sentencing Guidelines).

1978-1979: Project Leader, Michigan Felony Sentencing Project. Michigan State Court Administrative Office (co-directed research project that established prototype of Michigan Felony Sentencing Guidelines.)

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