2024-2025 Undergraduate Bulletin
Criminal Justice and Forensic Science Department
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The Department of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science offers a bachelor of arts in criminology and criminal justice (CCJ), a bachelor of science in forensic science, a bachelor of arts in forensic and investigative science, a minor in forensic and investigative science, a concentration in forensic psychology for students majoring in CCJ, legal studies, or psychology, and a POST concentration for students interested in a career law enforcement.
The CCJ major provides a student with a social science approach to the study of crime. The required courses are the foundation to understand crime and justice. The required courses include research methods, analysis of systemic injustices, and specialized courses in criminology and criminal justice. Graduates pursue careers related to public safety, social services, local, state, or federal law enforcement, corrections, probation and parole, and criminal justice research and policy.
The forensic science major prepares students for careers in forensic labs across the forensic science profession through practical hands-on training. Upon exit of the program, students will be versed in the international standards of practice within forensic science so that they can properly prepare and analyze materials to generate accurate, relevant, and supported scientific data to assist the legal system.
The forensic and investigative science major provides students with a practical and theoretical study of the theory, analysis, and procedures used in scientifically investigating and processing crime scenes. The major prepares students for positions as crime scene analysts, latent fingerprint examiners, firearms examiners, forensic photographers, evidence technicians, investigators, and law enforcement officers and agents.
The forensic and investigative science minor complements majors in CCJ, legal studies, psychology, and other related disciplines by providing students with an introduction to forensic science concepts.
Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) Concentration. Hamline University’s Department of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science is certified by the Minnesota POST Board as a provider of pre-service academic training for students seeking licensure as a Minnesota peace officer. The POST concentration requires students to complete eight courses along with a criminology and criminal justice major. Students interested in a career in law enforcement are encouraged to declare the POST Concentration as soon as possible after enrollment at the university.
Interdisciplinary Concentrations
The forensic psychology concentration provides a multidisciplinary approach to the study of crime, motivations for criminal behavior, and the response and use of psychology in the American legal system. A concentration in forensic psychology is open to students majoring in criminology and criminal justice, legal studies, or psychology. In addition to their major, students complete coursework that provides students with the foundational knowledge of our legal system, criminology, and psychology that culminates in a senior seminar, CJFS 5670 Forensic Psychology and the Law.
The public policy concentration educates students about public policy and helps them to develop the knowledge and skills necessary to create innovative, socially responsible solutions to the most critical issues facing society. The program forms an arc, beginning with an introduction to ethical public policy, building skills with methodology coursework, and culminating with a capstone experience in which students engage directly with a public policy issue in a semester-long applied project or internship. Students will acquire an extensive set of skills in policy evaluation and analysis, equipping them to become agents of change to improve the quality of life for people and their communities, at home and abroad. The public policy concentration is open to students majoring in criminology and criminal justice, economics, environmental studies, legal studies, political science, or public health sciences.
Internships
All students pursuing a major in criminology and criminal justice or a major in forensic science are required to complete an internship in their chosen field concurrently with the required capstone course. The internship provides a unique opportunity for students to gain hands-on experience in their individual field(s) of interest. Past internship sites have included (but are not limited to): Bureau of Criminal Apprehension Crime Lab, United States Office of the Postal Inspector (USPIS), The Link, Tubman Center, Safe Communities of United Tribes, Catholic Charities, Minnesota Coalition of Battered Women, Humanize my Hoodie, The Violence Project, Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, Dakota County Sheriff’s Office, Hennepin County Community Corrections, Ramsey County Community Corrections, Minnetonka Police Department, Minneapolis Police Department Crime Lab, Saint Paul Police Department Crime Lab, U.S. Marshals, United States Department of Agriculture (investigations unit), Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office, Lino Lakes Juvenile Corrections, and non-profit agencies.
Postgraduate Opportunities
In addition to the various professional opportunities described above, students may also continue their education in graduate programs in criminology, criminal justice, social work, sociology, psychology, public administration, or law. Forensic science students may pursue a forensic science graduate degree.
Honors and Student Activities
Students wishing to be considered for honors should request detailed information from department faculty no later than the beginning of spring of their junior year. Honors students must have a GPA of 3.5 or better in the criminology and criminal justice major, and honors projects must be approved by department faculty. Honors projects should exhibit distinctive scholarship, originality of thought, and a high degree of relevance to a major issue in the discipline. In addition, summer collaborative research projects with faculty are possible. Criminology and criminal justice majors and forensic science certificate students may apply for summer collaborative research funds with a department faculty member.
Hamline’s Department of Criminal Justice and Forensic Science has an active and award winning forensic sciences society. Students pursuing a forensic science major or minor in forensic and investigative science can become an active member in this student organization to explore educational and career opportunities in the field of forensic science.
Forensic Science Certificate for Post-baccalaureate Students
The Forensic Science Certificate prepares students to work in crime labs and related offices. Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree in natural science from a regionally accredited college or university with a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or higher. Petitions to earn the certificate through other majors will be evaluated by the chair of the department.
Faculty
Caity Curry, assistant professor, criminology and criminal justice. BA 2014, University of Arkansas; MA 2016, University of Arkansas; PhD 2024, University of Minnesota> Professor Curry’s areas of expertise include: law, punishment, race, and social movements.
Megan Foley, assistant professor, forensic science. BA 2012, College of St. Benedict; MSFS 2014, Arcadia University; PhD 2024, Oklahoma State University; ABC-Molecular Biology. Professor Foley’s areas of expertise include: forensic serological analysis, current techniques in forensic genetics, forensic next generation sequencing analysis, and emerging forensic technologies and analyses, e.g. forensic genetic genealogy.
Sarah J. Greenman, associate professor, criminology and criminal justice. BA, Carleton College; MA 2010, University of Maryland; PhD 2014, University of Maryland. Professor Greenman’s areas of expertise include: victimology, sanctioning, and deterrence.
Ryan P. Larson, assistant professor, criminology and criminal justice. BA 2014, Concordia College; MA 2018, University of Minnesota; PhD 2022, University of Minnesota. Professor Larson’s areas of expertise include: crime, punishment, and inequality, collateral consequences, quantitative methodology and statistics, and causal inference.
Jillian K. Peterson, professor, criminology and criminal justice. BA, Grinnell College; MA 2009, PhD 2012, University of California, Irvine. Professor Peterson’s areas of expertise include: mental illness, forensic psychology, violent crime, program and policy evaluation.
Shelly S. Schaefer, chair, professor, criminology and criminal justice. BA, University of Minnesota; MA 2007, University of Minnesota; PhD 2011, University of Minnesota. Professor Schaefer’s areas of expertise include: community crime prevention, sociology of punishment, juvenile delinquency and juvenile justice policy, and crime policy evaluation.
Jamie S. Spaulding, assistant professor, forensic science. BA 2015, West Virginia University; BS 2015, West Virginia University; MS 2017, West Virginia University; PhD 2020, West Virginia University. Professor Spaulding’s areas of expertise include: firearms examination, evidence interpretation, and forensic intelligence.
Affiliated Interdisciplinary Program
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