CURRICULUM VITAE



CURRICULUM VITAE

Ko-lin Chin

School of Criminal Justice

Rutgers University

123 Washington Street

Newark, NJ 07102

(973) 353-1488 (Office)

(973) 353-5896 (Fax)

E-mail: kolin.chin@rutgers.edu

Education:

Ph.D. 1986, Sociology, Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania

M.A. 1981, Sociology, Department of Sociology, University of Houston

MBA 1981, Finance, Department of Business Administration, University of Houston

B.A. 1975, International Business, School of Business Administration, National Taiwan University

Professional Experience:

07/2010-present: Distinguished Professor, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University-Newark

07/2002-06/2010: Professor, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University-Newark

07/1996-06/2002: Associate Professor, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University-Newark

07/1995-06/1996: Assistant Professor, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University-Newark

09/1991-06/1995: Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, Anthropology, and Criminal Justice, Rutgers University-Newark

12/1987-08/1991: Senior Research Analyst, New York City Criminal Justice Agency

Fellowships, Awards and Honors:

Distinguished Visiting Scholar (2019)

Department of Sociology

University of Macau

U.S. Speaker and Specialist Award (2005)

U.S. Department of State

Fulbright Scholar, China (2004-2005)

Council for International Exchange of Scholars

Fulbright Scholar, Taiwan (1998-1999)

Council for International Exchange of Scholars

Board of Trustees Fellowship for Scholarly Excellence (1996)

Rutgers University

Henry Rutgers Research Fellow (1991 - 1993)

Rutgers University

Scholarship:

1. Published Books

(a) Authored

Chin, K. and S. Zhang. 2015. The Chinese Heroin Trade: Cross-border Drug Trafficking in Southeast Asia and Beyond. New York: New York University Press.

Chin, K. 2014. Going Down to the Sea: Chinese Sex Workers Abroad. Chiang Mai, Thailand: Silkworm Books. (in English) (Published in Chinese in China, 下海: 二十八位中國小姐的故事, 南方日報, 2010; also in Chinese in Taiwan, 下海: 30 位中國小姐的故事, 巨流, 2011)

Chin, K. and J. Finckenauer. 2012. Selling Sex Overseas: Chinese Women and the Realities of Prostitution and Global Sex Trafficking. New York: New York University Press. (Winner of the 2013 Distinguished Book Award from the Division of International Criminology, American Society of Criminology)

Chin, K. 2009. The Golden Triangle: Inside Southeast Asia’s Drug Trade. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. (Published in Chinese in Taiwan, 全球毒品交易黑幕, 商周, 2009; also in Burmese in Myanmar by Pyi Zone Publishing House, Yangon, forthcoming in 2020)

Finckenaeur, J. and K. Chin. 2007. Asian Transnational Organized Crime. New York: Nova Science Publishers.

Chin, K. 2003. Heijin: Organized Crime, Business, and Politics in Taiwan. Armonk, NY: M.E. Sharpe. (Published in Chinese in Taiwan, 黑金: 台灣政治與經濟實況掲秘, 商周, 2004; in China, 黑金: 台灣政治與經濟實況掲秘, 群衆, 2006)

Chin, K. 1999. Smuggled Chinese: Clandestine Immigration to the United States. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. (Published in Chinese in the U.S., 偷渡美國, 明鏡, 1999)

Chin, K. 1996. Chinatown Gangs: Extortion, Enterprise, and Ethnicity. New York: Oxford University Press. (Published in Chinese in Taiwan, 華人幫派, 巨流, 1995)

Chin, K. 1990. Chinese Subculture and Criminality: Non-traditional Crime Groups in America. Westport, CT: Greenwood. (Published in Chinese in Hong Kong and Taiwan, 幫會與華人次文化, 商務, 1993)

(b) Edited:

Kelly, R., K. Chin, and R. Schatzberg (eds.) 1994. Handbook of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport: CT: Greenwood.

2. Journal Articles (Refereed)

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2018. China’s new long march to control illicit substance use: From a punitive regime towards harm reduction. Journal of Drug Policy Analysis, 11(1), 2018.

Chin, K. and J. Finckenauer. 2011. Chickenheads, agents, mommies, and jockeys: The social organization of transnational commercial sex. Crime, Law and Social Change, Vol. 56, No. 5: 463-484.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2008. Snakeheads, mules, and protective umbrellas: A review of current research on Chinese organized crime. Crime, Law and Social Change, Vol. 50, No. 3: 177-195.

Chin, K. 2007. Into the thick of it: Methodological issues in studying the drug trade in the Golden Triangle. Asian Journal of Criminology, Vol. 2, No. 2, December: 85-109.

Zhang, S., K. Chin, and J. Miller. 2007. Women’s participation in Chinese transnational human smuggling: A gendered market perspective. Criminology Vol. 45, No. 3: 699-733.

Finckenauer, J. and K. Chin. 2006. Asian transnational organized crime and its impact on the United States. Trends in Organized Crime Vol. 10, No. 2, Winter: 18-107.

Chin, K. and R. Godson. 2006. Organized crime and the political-criminal nexus in China. Trends in Organized Crime Vol. 9, No. 3, Spring: 5-44.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2003. The declining significance of triad societies in transnational illegal activities. British Journal of Criminology Vol. 43, No. 3: 463-482.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2002. Enter the dragon: Inside Chinese human smuggling organizations. Criminology Vol. 40, No. 4: 737-768.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2001. Chinese human smuggling in the United States of America. Crime and Society Vol. 1, No. 2: 31-52.

Chin, K., S. Zhang, and R. Kelly. 1978. Transnational Chinese organized crime activities. Transnational Organized Crime Volume 4, No. 3 & 4, Autumn/Winter: 127-154.

Chin, K. 1995. Triad societies in Hong Kong. Transnational Organized Crime. Volume 1 (Spring): 47-64.

Chin, K. 1994. Out-of-town brides: International marriage and wife abuse among Chinese immigrants. Journal of Comparative Family Studies Vol. 25, No. 1, Spring: 53-69.

Kelly, R., K. Chin, and J. Fagan. 1993. The activity, structure, and control of Chinese gangs: Law enforcement perspectives. Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice Vol. 9, No. 3, August: 221-39.

Kelly, R., K. Chin and J. Fagan. 1993. The dragon breathes fire: Chinese organized crime in New York City. Contemporary Crises: Crime, Law and Social Change Vol. 19: 245-69.

Chin, K., R. Kelly and J. Fagan. 1993. Methodological issues in studying Chinese gang extortion. The Gang Journal Vol. 1, No. 2: 25-36.

Chin, K., J. Fagan, and R. Kelly. Patterns of Chinese gang extortion. 1992. Justice Quarterly Vol. 9, No. 4, December: 401-422.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1991. Social processes of initiation into crack. Journal of Drug Issues Vol. 21, No. 2, Spring: 313-344.

Belenko, S., J. Fagan and K. Chin. 1991. Criminal justice responses to crack. Journal of Research in Crime and Delinquency Vol. 1, No. 28, February: 55-74.

Chin, K., T. M. Lai and M. Rouse. 1990-1991. Social adjustment and alcoholism among Chinese in New York City. The International Journal of the Addictions Vol. 25, No. 5A & 6A: 711-732.

Dunlap, E., B. Johnson, H. Sanabria, E. Holliday, V. Lipsey, M. Barnett, W. Hopkins, I. Sobel, D. Randolph, and K. Chin. 1990. Studying crack users and their criminal careers: The Scientific and artistic aspects of locating hard-to-reach subjects and interviewing them about sensitive topics. Contemporary Drug Problem (Special issue on crack) Spring: 121-144.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1989. Initiation into crack and powdered cocaine: A tale of two epidemics. Contemporary Drug Problem (Special issue on crack), Winter: 579-617.

3. Chapters in Books

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2015. Swim against the tide: Using qualitative data to build a theory on Chinese human smuggling. In Jody Miller and Wilson Palacios (eds.) Qualitative Research in Criminology. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers: 215-233.

Chin, K. 2014. Chinese organized crime. In Letizia Paoli (ed.) Oxford Handbook of Organized Crime, Oxford University Press: 219-233.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2011. Ants moving houses – cross-border drug trafficking in the Golden Triangle. In Cindy Smith, Sheldon Zhang, and Rosemary Barberet (eds.) Routledge Handbook of International Criminology. London and New York: Routledge: 237-247.

Finckenauer, J. and K. Chin. 2010. Sex trafficking: A target for situational crime prevention? In Karen Bullock, Ronald Clarke, and Nick Tilley (eds.) Situational Prevention of Organised Crime. Cullompton, Devon, UK: Willan Publishing: 58-80.

Chin, K. 2003. Black-gold politics: The political-criminal nexus in Taiwan. In Roy Godson (ed.) Menace to Society: Political-Criminal Collaboration Around the World. New Brunswick: Transaction: 257-283.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2002. Snakeheads: Chinese human trafficking organizations. In B. D. Ruyver, G. Vermeulen, and T. V. Beken (eds.), Combating Transnational Organized Crime. Antwerp, Belgium: Maklu: 383-385.

Chin, K. 2991. The social organization of Chinese human smuggling. In David Kyle and Rey Koslowski (eds.) Migration Merchants: Global Human Trafficking in Comparative Perspective. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press: 216-234.

Chin, K. 1999. Smuggled Chinese in the Mountain of Gold. In David Haines and Karen Rosenblum (eds.) Illegal Immigration in America. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press: 293-322.

Chin, K. 1998. Smuggling of Chinese aliens and organized crime. In Schmid, Alex (ed.) Migration and Crime. Milan: International Scientific and Professional Advisory Council: 137-147.

Chin, K., J. Fagan, and R. Kelly. 1997. Patterns of Chinese gang extortion. In G. Larry Mays (ed.) Gangs and Gang Behavior. Chicago: Nelson-Hall Publishers: 206-27.

Chin, K. 1997. Safe house or hell house?: Experiences of newly arrived undocumented Chinese. In Paul Smith (ed.) Human Smuggling: Chinese Migrant Trafficking and the Challenge to America's Immigration Tradition. Washington, D.C.: Center for Strategic & International Studies: 169-195.

Chin, K. 1996. Gang violence in Chinatown. In Huff, R. (ed.) Gangs in America (Second Edition), Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications: 157-84.

Chin. K. 1996. Social sources of Chinese gang delinquency. In Joseph Weis, Robert Crutchfield, and George Bridges (eds.) Juvenile Delinquency. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press: 205-209.

Chin, K. and J. Fagan. 1995. Social order and gang formation in Chinatown. In Freda Adler and William Laufer (eds.) Advances in Criminological Theory Volume 6, New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction: 228-246.

Chin, K. 1995. Chinese gangs and extortion. In Malcolm Klein, Cheryl Maxson, and Jody Miller (eds.) The Modern Gang Reader. Los Angeles: Roxbury Publishing Co.: 46-52.

Kelly, R., K. Chin and J. Fagan. 1994. Dragon breeds fire: Chinese organized crime in New York City. In Nikos Passas (ed.) Organized Crime. Brookfield, VT: Dartmouth Publishing Co.

Chin, K., R. Kelly and J. Fagan. 1994. Chinese organized crime in America. In Handbook of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport: CT: Greenwood: 213-43.

Kelly, R., R. Schatzberg and K. Chin. 1994. Without fear of retribution: The Witness Security Program. In Handbook of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport: CT: Greenwood: 491-504.

Kelly, R., R. Schatzberg and K. Chin. 1994. Turning black money into green: Money laundering. In Handbook of Organized Crime in the United States. Westport: CT: Greenwood: 311-30.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1993. Social processes of initiation into crack. In Richard Dembo and Linda Williams (eds.) Drugs and Crime. Lanham, MD: University Press of America.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1990. Violence as regulation and social control in the distribution of crack. In Drugs and Violence (Edited by Mario de la Rosa, Bernard Gropper, and Elizabeth Lambert), NIDA Research Monograph, Rockville, MD: National Institute of Drug Abuse: 8-43.

Chin, K. Chinese gangs and extortion. In Huff, R. (ed.) Gangs in America. Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1990: 129-145.

4. Journal Articles (Not Refereed)

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2002. Enter the dragon: Inside Chinese smuggling organizations. NIJ Journal No. 248: 35-36.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2001. Chinese human smuggling in the United States of America. Forum on Crime and Society (a United Nations official journal) Vol. 1, No. 2, December: 31-52.

Chin, K. 1994. Victims' reaction to gang extortion in New York City's Chinatown. Department of Sociology, University of Hong Kong, Occasional Paper 14.

Kelly, R., K. Chin, and J. Fagan. 1993. Notes on the vulnerabilities of the Chinese business community to extortionate crime in New York City. IALEIA Journal 7(2) Winter: 21-28.

Chin, K. 1991. Emergence of Asian organized crime. Law Enforcement Intelligence Analysis Digest Volume 6, Number 1, Summer.

5. Other Publications

Chin, K. 2007. Into the thick of it: Methodological issues in studying the drug trade in the Golden Triangle. In Organized Crime in Asia: Governance and Accountability. Symposium Proceedings. Brisbane: Queensland University of Technology: 1-24.

Chin, K. and S. Zhang. 2007. The Chinese Connection: Cross-border Drug Trafficking between Myanmar and China. Washington, D.C.: National Criminal Justice Reference Service.

Finckenaeur, J. and K. Chin. 2007. Asian Transnational Organized Crime and Its Impact on the United States. NIJ Special Report. Washington, D.C.: National Institute of Justice.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2004. Characteristics of Chinese human smugglers. NIJ Research in Brief. Washington, D.C.: National Institute of Justice.

6. Notes and Book Reviews

Illicit Flirtation: Labor, Migration, and Sex Trafficking in Tokyo. Rhacel Salazar Parrenas. Stanford: Stanford University Press. Criminal Law and Criminal Justice Books, November 2012.

Boss of Bosses: The Fall of the Godfather, the FBI and Paul Castellano. Joseph O'Brien and Adris Kurins. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991. Law Enforcement Intelligence Analysis Digest. 6 (2) (Winter 1991-1992): 31-33. With R. Kelly.

The solution isn't silence. New York Newsday New York Forum, July 22, 1991, p. 36. With R. Kelly.

7. Technical Reports

Finckenauer, J. and K. Chin. 2010. Researching and Rethinking Sex Trafficking: The Movement of Chinese Women to Asia and the United States for Commercial Sex. Final report submitted to National Institute of Justice for Grant #2006-IJ-CX-0008, August.

Chin, K. and S. Zhang. 2007. The Chinese Connection: Cross-Border Drug Trafficking between Myanmar and China. Final report submitted to the National Institute of Justice for Grant #2004-IJ-CX-0023, April.

Finckenauer, J. and K. Chin. 2004. Asian Transnational Organized Crime and Its Impact on the United States: Developing a Transnational Crime Research Agenda. Final report submitted to the National Institute of Justice for Grant TDL#1700-215, August.

Chin, K. 2004. The Drug Trade in the Wa Area of the Golden Triangle. Final Report submitted to the National Science Foundation for Grant SES-0095929, May.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2002. The Social Organization of Chinese Human Smuggling. Final report submitted to the National Institute of Justice for Grant #1999-IJ-CX-0028, June.

Chin. K. 2001. Organized Crime in Taiwan. Final report submitted to the Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, September.

Chin, K. and R. Kelly. 1997. Human Snakes: Illegal Chinese Immigrants in the United States. Final Report, Grant SBR 93-11114, Law and Social Science Program, National Science Foundation.

Wang, C., K. Chin, and L. Lin. 1997. Preventing the Illegal Migration of Mainlanders to Taiwan. Final report submitted to the Mainland Affairs Council of the Executive Yuan of Taiwan. (in Chinese)

Chin, K., J. Fagan, and R. Kelly. 1994. Gangs and Social Order in Chinatown: Extortion, Enterprise, and Ethnicity. Final Report, Grant #89-IJ-CX-0021, National Institute of Justice, U.S. Department of Justice.

8. Work in Progress

Chin, K. The Counterfeiting of Luxury Fashion Goods in China. A book manuscript.

9. Grants

Co-Principal Investigator (PI J. O. Finckenauer) “A Case Study of Human Trafficking: The Transnational Movement of Chinese Women for Commercial Sex” (National Institute of Justice, $284,287, #2006-IJ-CX-0008) 9/2006-8/2008.

Principal Investigator (Co-PI S. Zhang) “The Chinese Connection: Changing Patterns of Drug Trafficking in the Golden Triangle” (National Institute of Justice, $199,996, #2004-IJ-CX-0023) 9/2004-8/2006.

Principal Investigator (Co-PI J. O. Finckenaeur) “Asian Transnational Organized Crime and Its Impact on the United States: Developing A Transnational Crime Research Agenda” (National Institute of Justice, $80,000, TDL#1700-215) 9/2003-8/2004.

Principal Investigator. “The Opium Trade in the Wa Area of the Golden Triangle” (Law and Social Science Program, National Science Foundation, $219,960, SES-0095929) 3/2001-2/2003.

Co-Principal Investigator (PI S. Zhang). “The Social Organization of Human Smuggling – A Cross-National Research Proposal” (National Institute of Justice, $203,977, 1999-IJ-CX-0028) 12/1999-11/2001.

Principal Investigator. “Organized Crime in Taiwan” (The Chiang Ching-kuo Foundation, $30,000, 7/1999-6/2000; Pacific Cultural Foundation, $3,500, 7/1999-6/2000).

Co-Principal Investigator (PI C. Wang, Co-PI L. Lin). “Preventing Mainland Chinese from Illegally Migrating to Taiwan” (Mainland Affairs Council of the Executive Yuan of Taiwan, $40,000) 7/1995-6/1996.

Principal Investigator (Co-PI R. Kelly). "Illegal Chinese Immigrants in the United States" (Law and Social Science Program, National Science Foundation, $77,000, SBR 93-11114) 9/1993-8/1995.

Co-Principal Investigator (PI J. Fagan, Co-PI R. Kelly). "Patterns of Organized Crime Activities in New York City Asian Business Communities: Extortion and Victimization by Asian Youth Gangs" (National Institute of Justice, $143,992, 89-IJ-CX-0021-S1) 9/1991-8/1992.

Co-Principal Investigator (PI J. Fagan, Co-PI R. Kelly). "Patterns of Organized Crime Activities in Asian Businesses in the New York Metropolitan Area" (National Institute of Justice, $258,570, 89-IJ-CX-0021) 6/1989-5/1991.

10. Conference Presentations and Lectures

A. Conferences

(a) Invited International Conference Presentations

K. Chin. Speaker. 2018. Extortion in Chinese societies in the United States and Greater China. Expert Group Meeting, Global Initiative against Transnational Organized Crime, Vienna, December 10-11.

K. Chin. 2012. Sex slaves or sex workers? A case study of the transnational movement of Chinese women for commercial sex. Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, December 14.

K. Chin and J. Finckenauer. 2011. Defining sex trafficking: Myth or reality. Paper presented at the 3rd International Symposium on Terrorism and Transnational Crime, Antalya, Turkey, December 9-12.

K. Chin. 2008. Trafficked sex slaves or enterprising migrants who sell sex? Paper presented at the Trafficking in Persons Research and Data Forum, Hong Kong, University of Hong Kong, November 3-4.

K. Chin and J. Finckenaeur. 2005. Combating trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation.” A paper presented at the Combating Trafficking in Persons Conference, China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, Beijing, December 8.

K. Chin. 2004. Black-gold: Organized crime, business, and politics in Taiwan. A paper presented at the International Conference on Underworld Crime in Hong Kong, Macao, and Taiwan. Shangtong University, Jinan City, Shangtong Province, China, November 12-15.

K. Chin. 2001. Black gold politics: Organized crime, business, and politics in Taiwan. Sino-U.S. Workshop on the Political-Criminal Nexus in China. Beijing, December 10-11.

K. Chin. 2001. The smuggling of Chinese from China to the United States. A paper presented at the Metropolis Conference, Rotterdam, November 26-30.

Chin, K. 1998. Transnational Chinese organized crime activities. Paper presented at the conference "Transnational Crime," Courmayeur Mont Blanc, September 25-27, sponsored by the International Scientific and Professional Advisory Council of the UN Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Programme.

Chin, K. 1996. Chinese alien smuggling and organized crime. Paper presented at the conference "Migration and Crime," Courmayeur Mont Blanc, October 5-8, sponsored by the International Scientific and Professional Advisory Council of the UN Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice Programme.

Chin, K. 1996. Chinese gangs and organized crime. Paper presented at the Organisierti Kriminalitat, Congress Center Metalli Zug, Switzerland, September 5-7.

Chin, K. 1992. Youth crime and welfare policy. Paper presented at the Republic of China's National Development Seminar, Taipei, Taiwan, January 5-11.

Kelly, R., K. Chin, and J. Fagan. 1990. The dragon breathes fire: Chinese organized crime in New York City. Paper presented to the Political Sociology Faculty of the University of Florence, Firenze, Italy, May 28.

Chin, K. 1988. Chinese gangs in New York City: 1965-1988. Presented at the Social and Psychological Factors in Juvenile Delinquency: An International Conference between Republic of China and United States of America. Taipei, Taiwan. August.

(b) Invited International Conference Participation

Participant. 2000. United Nations Convention on Transnational Organized Crime, December 12-15, Palermo, Italy.

Participant. 1998. United Nations Convention on Transnational Organized Crime, April 21-30, Vienna, Austria.

Participant. 1992. Republic of China's National Development Seminar, Taipei, Taiwan, January 5-11.

(c) Invited Domestic Conference Presentations

Chin, K. 2009. Corruption, organized crime, and transnational crime. Paper presented at the seminar “Challenging Corruption: Proactive Responses to Criminal Conduct,” sponsored by Rutgers Institute on Corruption Studies (RICS), Rutgers University-Newark, November 9.

Chin, K. 1998. The social organization of Chinese human smuggling. Paper presented at the conference “International Migration and Crime,” Rutgers University-Newark, May 15.

Chin, K. 1996. Safe House or Hell House? The Experiences of Newly Arrived Undocumented Chinese. Paper presented at the "Asian Migrant Trafficking: The New Threat to America's Immigration Tradition," Honolulu, July 25-27, sponsored by the Pacific Forum CSIS.

Chin, K. 1995. Illegal Chinese immigrants. Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the Chinese American Academic & Professional Society, New York, September 9-10.

Chin, K. 1992. Chinese gang violence. Paper presented at the LouDi-ShengGen: The Legal Political and Economic Status of Chinese in the Diaspora, an International Conference on Overseas Chinese sponsored by the Department of Ethnic Studies, University of California, Berkeley, San Francisco, November 26-29.

Chin, K. 1992. Victims' reaction to gang extortion in Chinatown. Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the Chinese American Academic & Professional Society. New York, June 26-27.

Chin, K., J. Fagan, and R. Kelly. 1991. Part of the business: Reaction to gang extortion in the Chinese business community. Paper presented at the Multinational Conference on Asian Organized Crime, San Francisco, California, September 24-26.

Fagan, J., K. Chin, and R. Kelly. 1991. Lucky money for little brother: The prevalence and seriousness of Chinese gang extortion. Paper presented at the Multinational Conference on Asian Organized Crime, San Francisco, California, September 24-26.

Chin, K. 1990. Crime report patterns of Asian business owners. Paper presented at the Fifth National Asian Peace Officers' Conference. John Jay College of Criminal Justice, New York City, October 3-5.

Chin, K. 1990. Victimization of Chinese businessmen in New York City. Paper presented at the Annual Convention of the Chinese American Academic & Professional Society, Albany, New York, September 22-23.

Chin, K. 1989. Community disorganization and delinquency: The case of New York City's Chinatown. Presented at the Chinese American Academic and Professional Society's Annual Convention Program in New York. May.

Chin, K. 1988. The Triad mystique. Presented at the Annual Conference of the Association of Young Chinese Social Scientists in North America. Washington, D.C. May.

(c) Non-invited International Conference Presentations

K. Chin. 2008. A case study of human trafficking: The transnational movement of Chinese women for commercial sex. Paper presented at the XV World Congress of the International Society of Criminology, Barcelona, Spain, July 20-25.

(d) Non-invited Domestic Conference Presentations

Chin, K. and J. Finckenauer. 2011. Chickenhead, agent, mommy, and jockey: The social organization of transnational commercial sex. A paper presented at the Annual Conference of the American Society of Criminology, Washington, DC, November 15-19.

Chin, K. and J. Finckenauer. 2009. Is this sex trafficking? A paper presented at the Annual Conference of the American Society of Criminology, Philadelphia, November 4-7.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2002. Female snakeheads. A paper presented at the Annual Conference of the American Society of Criminology, Chicago, November 13-16.

Zhang, S. and K. Chin. 2000. The social organization of Chinese alien smuggling—Preliminary findings. A paper presented at the annual conference of the American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, California, November.

Chin, K. 1995. The social organization of human smuggling. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology. Boston, November.

Chin, K. 1994. The state of Chinese gangs. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Miami, FL, November.

Chin, K. and Leona Lee. 1993. Gang violence in Chinatown. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Phoenix, AZ, October.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1992. Ethnicity and enterprise: Business, violence and organized crime among Chinese youth gangs. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, New Orleans, November 4-7.

Chin, K., R. Kelly, and J. Fagan. 1992. Patterns of Chinese gang extortion. Paper presented at Annual Meeting of Law and Society, Philadelphia, May 28-31.

Kelly, R., K. Chin, and J. Fagan. 1991. Notes on the vulnerabilities of the Chinese business community to extortionate crime in New York City. Paper presented at the American Society of Criminology, San Francisco, November 19-23.

Chin, K. and J. Fagan. 1990. The impact of crack on crime. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Baltimore, November 1990.

Chin, K. and J. Fagan. 1990. Selectivity of social sanctions among crack/drug users. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Baltimore, November.

Chin, K., R. Kelly, and J. Fagan. 1990. Chinese gangs and extortion. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences, Denver, Colorado, March.

Chin, K. 1989. Social sources of Chinese gang delinquency. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Reno. November.

Chin, K. and Fagan, J. 1989. Initiation and social processes of crack use. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Reno. November.

Belenko, S., K. Chin, and J.A. Fagan. 1989. Typologies of criminal career among crack arrestees. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Reno. November.

Bruce, J., E. Dunlap, K. Chin, and J. Fagan. 1989. Selling activity of crack sellers. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Reno. November.

Fagan, J. and K. Chin. 1988. Initiation into crack use and selling: New and old generations. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Chicago. November.

Chin, K. 1988. Chinese organized crime: Myth and fact. Presented at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology Annual Meeting in Chicago. November.

B. Lectures

(a) Invited International Lectures

Speaker. 2019. Counterfeiting of luxury goods in Guangzhou, China. Department of Sociology, University of Macau. August 14.

Keynote Speaker. 2015. Is this sex trafficking? The 2015 Annual Conference of the Asian Society of Criminology, Hong Kong, June 23-26.

Keynote Speaker. Sex trafficking. 2009. The 2009 Annual Conference of Asian Association of Police Studies, Taipei, Taiwan, June 1-4.

Speaker. 2008. Organized crime in Taiwan and China. Taiwan’s Foreign Correspondents Association, Taipei, Taiwan, May 15.

Speaker. 2008. Criminological research in the United States. Fujian Provincial Police Academy, Fuzhou, China, June 10.

Keynote Speaker. 2007. Into the thick of it: Methodological issues in studying Asian organized crime. International Conference on Organized Crime in Asia. National Singapore University, June 2-29.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Public Security College, Shanghai, China, December 19.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Law School, Guangxi University of Nationalities, Nanning, China, December 16.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Law School, Guangxi University, Nanning, China, December 15.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Law School, Yunnan University, Kunming, China, December 14.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Yunnan Police College, Kunming, China, December 14.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Save-the-Children (NGO), Kunming, China, December 14.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Southwest University of Political Science and Law, Chongqing, China, December 12.

Speaker. 2005. Fighting trafficking in persons: U.S. – China cooperation. Law School, Southwest University, Chongqing, China, December 12.

Speaker. 2005. Transnational organized crime: Current situation and future countermeasures. College of Criminal Justice, China University of Political Science and Law, Beijing, December 9.

Speaker. 2003. The drug trade in the Golden Triangle. Lincang Public Security Administration, Lincang, Yunnan, China, August 18.

Speaker. 2001. Human smuggling. Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement, Leiden, the Netherlands, November 29.

Speaker. 2000. Illegal Chinese immigrants in the United States. Fifth International Metropolis Conference, Vancouver, November 13-17.

Speaker. 1999. Chinese gangs. Central Police University, Taipei, Taiwan, December 20.

Speaker. 1999. The Chinese human trade. Fujian Provincial Police Academy, Fuzhou, China, June 15.

Speaker. 1999. Illegal Chinese immigrants in the United States. Department of Sociology, Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan, March 26.

Speaker. 1999. Chinese organized crime in the United States. Institute of Sociology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, January 8.

Speaker. 1995. The engagement of Chinese criminal groups in extortion, drug trade and illegal immigration in Europe and the U.S. Conference on Chinese Organized Crime in Italy and Europe, Florence, March 25.

Speaker. 1994. Broken dreams in the mountain of gold: Illegal Chinese immigrants in New York City. Institute for European and American Studies, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, August 30.

Speaker. 1993. Chinese gangs in America. Public Security University, Beijing, China, June 18.

Speaker: 1991. Chinese crime groups in America. Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan, February 21.

(b) Invited Domestic Lectures

Keynote Speaker. 2016. The reality and myths of sex trafficking: Chinese women in the sex trade in Asia and the United States. College of New Jersey, April 13.

Speaker. 2010. The smuggling of PRC Chinese to the United States. U.S. Political Asylum Office, Rosedale, New York, May 13.

Speaker. 2010. The Golden Triangle: Inside Southeast Asia’s drug trade. Center for Global Affairs, New York University, March 1.

Speaker. 2010. The smuggling of PRC Chinese to the United States. U.S. Political Asylum Office, Lyndhurst, New Jersey, January 25.

Speaker. 2008. The transnational movement of Chinese women to Asia and the United States for commercial sex. New York University Law School Goldstock Lecture, October 21.

Speaker. 2000. The political-criminal nexus in Taiwan. Georgetown University’s Executive Leadership Seminar, August 3.

Keynote Speaker. 1997. The Chinese human trade. The 19th Annual International Asian Organized Crime Conference, Orlando, Florida, April 21-25.

Speaker. 1996. Chinatown gangs. Hamilton Madison House, New York City, April 30.

Keynote Speaker. 1995. Against all odds: Illegal Chinese immigrants in the United States. The 17th Annual International Asian Organized Crime Conference, Boston, March 5-11.

Keynote Speaker. 1994. Illegal Chinese immigrants in New York City. The 16th Annual International Asian Organized Crime Conference, San Francisco, May 8-12.

Panelist. 1994. Symposium on organized crime. International Criminal Law Center, Fordham University School of Law, February 22.

Panel Chair. 1993. Asian gangs and organized Crime. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Phoenix, AZ, October.

Keynote Speaker. 1993. Chinese subculture and criminality. The 15th Annual International Asian Organized Crime Conference, Las Vegas, March 29-April 2.

Speaker. 1992. Domestic violence and Pacific/Asian-American women. Workshop on Violence against Women of Color: Research Issues. National Institute of Mental Health, Bethesda, Maryland, December 9-10.

Speaker. 1992. Chinese organized crime in North America. Asian Crime Seminar, sponsored by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice, Houston, November 12-14.

Chair. 1992. Chinatown in transition. Annual Convention of the Chinese American Academic & Professional Society. New York, June 26-27.

Speaker. 1992. Chinese subculture and criminality. Crime and Violence in the Asian Community II. Sponsored by the California Department of Justice and Oakland Police Department. Oakland, CA, May 18-20.

Speaker. 1992. Chinese/Asian gangs in New York City. Queens Criminal Court Building, NYS Division of Substance Abuse Services, May 12.

Speaker. 1992. Collecting crime data in Chinatown. Williams College, March 11.

Participant. 1991. Workshop on youth gangs. Committee on Law and Justice, National Academy of Sciences, Washington, D.C., November 14-15.

Speaker. 1991. Asian gang extortion. Asian Organized Crime/Asian Drug Trafficking Conference, sponsored by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. San Diego, California, August 25-29.

Speaker. 1991. Chinese-Americans. Special Issues Seminar: Understanding and Managing Cultural Diversity. Sponsored by the Division of Social and Policy Sciences, University of Texas. San Antonio, Texas, August 20-22.

Speaker. 1991. Researchers/practitioners interface. The First National Conference of the Youth Gang and Drug Prevention Program. Alexandria, VA. June 4-7.

Participant. 1991. Deviance and delinquency. Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, May 4-5.

Speaker. Chinese gangs in New York City. Dean's Lunch Guest Speaker. School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers University, December 5.

Speaker. 1990. The emergence of Asian organized crime: Problems and prospects. Annual Meeting of the International Association for the Study of Organized Crime, Baltimore, November.

Speaker. 1990. Studying organized crime in New York City's Chinatown. "Author Meets Critics" session at the Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology, Baltimore, November.

Panel Chair. 1990. Social problems in the Chinese communities. Annual Convention of the Chinese American Academic & Professional Society. Albany, New York, September 22-23.

Panel Chair. 1989. Social processes of Crack/Cocaine use and crime. Annual Meeting of the American Society of Criminology. Reno NV, November.

Panelist. 1989. International organized crime. Doctoral Colloquium Series Fall 1989, The Graduate School and University Center of the City University of New York. November.

Panelist. 1988. The Third Annual Asian-American Heritage Seminar. Asian-American Communications, Columbia University Teachers College. May.

Teaching:

Undergraduate

Introduction to Sociology I

Criminology

Research Methods I & II

Juvenile Delinquency and Justice

Gangs

Organized Crime

Human Smuggling and Trafficking

Asian Transnational Organized Crime

Drug Trafficking

Graduate

Foundations of Scholarship

Advanced Scholarship

Juvenile Delinquency and Justice

Theories of Crime and Criminality

Gangs

Organized Crime

Human Smuggling and Trafficking

Asian Transnational Organized Crime

Dissertation Committee:

Greene, Lorraine. The Oakland Health-Beat Program (Member)

Ma, Yue. Delinquency in New York City's Chinatown (Member)

Nurge, Dana. The Risks and Rewards of Membership: A Qualitative Study of the Nature, Context and Gender Dynamics of Female Gangs and Cliques in Boston (Member)

Richardson, Joseph. An Ethnographic Study of the Heterogeneity and Capitalization of Social Capital with Urban Communities and Families and the Effects on Serious Youth Violence among Young African-American Males (Member)

Wang, Pei-lin. The Prevention of Domestic Violence in Taiwan (Member)

Choo, Kyunk-Seok. Korean-American Youth Gangs (Chair)

McGloin, Jean. Gangs in Newark, New Jersey (Member)

Gao, Huan. Women Heroin Users in China’s Changing Society: An Analysis of the Careers of Women Drug Users (Chair)

Brisgone, Regina. Varieties of Behavior Across and Within Persons of Drug-Using Street Prostitutes (Member)

Barnes, Lynn. Policing the Schools: An Evaluation of North Carolina School Resource Officer Programs (Member)

Demir, Oguzhan. Sex Trafficking in Turkey (Member)

Jahic, Galma. Trafficking in Women from Eastern Europe (Member)

Liu, Min. Prostitution, Migration, and Human Trafficking (Member)

Pacheco, Vivian: Life Events: The Relationship between the Timing of Sexual and Physical Victimization on Women’s Drug Use and Criminal Behavior (Member)

Marvelli, David. Threat of harm: A U.S.-based Assessment of Transnational Organized Crime (Member)

Sverdlick, Ana. Human Trafficking: A Comparative Analysis of Why Countries with Similar Characteristics have Different Outcomes (Member)

Asuagbor, Dilys. The Commercial Sex Industry in Douala, Cameroon: A Qualitative Investigation (Member)

Novich, Maddy. Perceptions of Procedural Justice among Male and Female Minority Gang Members (Member)

Park, Hyoungah David. A Case Study of Human Smuggling and Trafficking: North Korean Migrants in China (Chair)

Kurti, Marin. Bringing the Underground Economy to Light: Specifying a Revised Model of Institutional Anomie Theory (Member)

Fowler, Kurt. The Changing Experience of Sex Work in the Digital Age (Member)

Marchi, Estee. Lone Wolf Terrorism (Member) (Ongoing)

Badgett, Kimberley. A Burmese Folk Devil: Oppression and Terrorism of the Rohingya (Chair) (Ongoing)

Begum, Popy. Illegal by Night, Ostracized by Day: Exploring the Characteristics and Experiences of Sex Workers in New Delhi, India (Chair) (Ongoing)

Professional Service:

2009-2014: Editorial board, Race and Justice: An International Journal

1995-2009: Associate Editor, Journal of Research on Crime and Delinquency

2008-2009: Chair, Search Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2007-2008: Chair, Search Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2005-2006: M.A. Scholastic Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2003-2004: M.A. Scholastic Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2002-2003: Chair, Search Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2002-2003: Chair, Diversity Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2001-2002: Chair, Search Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

2001-2002: Chair, Diversity Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

1995-2001: M.A. Scholastic Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

1993-1998: Consulting Editor, Journal of Gang Research

Spring 1997: Chair of Faculty, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark

Spring 1997: Ph.D. Committee, School of Criminal Justice, Rutgers-Newark.

1994-1995: Program Committee, American Society of Criminology

1992-1993: Minority Fellowship Award Committee, American Society of Criminology

1989-1990: Affirmative Action Committee, American Society of Criminology

1988-1989: Employment Exchange Committee, American Society of Criminology

1990-1991: Fellow, National Center for Gang Policy, Washington, D.C.

1987-1990: Advisory Board, Hamilton-Madison House, New York City

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