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About the Researchers
Graeme R. Newman
Graeme R. Newman is Distinguished Teaching Professor at the School of Criminal Justice, State University of New York at Albany, where he has taught for 25 years. He has published in the fields of comparative criminal justice, private security, situational crime prevention, and e-commerce crime. In 1990, he helped establish the United Nations Crime and Justice Information Network, the first criminal justice presence on the Internet. Among the books he has co-authored are: Superhighway Robbery: Crime Prevention and E-commerce Crime and Outsmarting the Terrorists (with Ronald V. Clarke) and Rational Choice and Situational Crime Prevention (with Ronald V. Clarke and Shlomo Shoham). Professor Newman received his B.A. from the University of Melbourne in Australia and his doctorate from the University of Pennsylvania.
Megan M. McNally
Megan M. McNally has taught as an adjunct professor in several colleges since 1998 and worked as a research assistant for the Center for Problem-Oriented Policing as a senior editor for Criminal Justice Abstracts. She received her B.S. in Philosophy and Psychology from Fordham University in 1995, and her M.S. in Criminal Justice from New Jersey City University in 1997. In 2005, Ms. McNally presented on identity theft at the NIJ Conference in Washington, D.C.
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