March 19, 2025 | Department of Crime Prevention and Corrections EMI Student Community (Session 2)
Event Date: March 19, 2025
Time: 16:10 – 18:00
Venue: College of Education Building I, Room 603
Target Participants: Students from the Department of Crime Prevention and Corrections (all year levels) and other CCU students interested in the lecture.
The Department of Crime Prevention and Corrections will host the EMI Student Community (Session 2) on March 19, 2025.
We are honored to welcome Dr. Rely Vilcica, Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University (USA), as our guest speaker.
Dr. Vilcica specializes in:
Progressive prosecution;
Pretrial justice and adjudication;
Parole and sanctioning processes;
Policy analysis and evaluation;
Comparative criminal justice.
His research addresses issues directly related to system legitimacy, contributes to theories of punishment, and has had a direct impact on public policy.
In this session, Professor Vilcica will focus on criminal justice reform in the United States, using progressive prosecutors in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as a case study. He will discuss the challenges and obstacles faced by these reforms and explore their implications and value for the broader U.S. criminal justice system.
Time: 16:10 – 18:00
Venue: College of Education Building I, Room 603
Target Participants: Students from the Department of Crime Prevention and Corrections (all year levels) and other CCU students interested in the lecture.
The Department of Crime Prevention and Corrections will host the EMI Student Community (Session 2) on March 19, 2025.
We are honored to welcome Dr. Rely Vilcica, Associate Professor in the Department of Criminal Justice at Temple University (USA), as our guest speaker.
Dr. Vilcica specializes in:
Progressive prosecution;
Pretrial justice and adjudication;
Parole and sanctioning processes;
Policy analysis and evaluation;
Comparative criminal justice.
His research addresses issues directly related to system legitimacy, contributes to theories of punishment, and has had a direct impact on public policy.
In this session, Professor Vilcica will focus on criminal justice reform in the United States, using progressive prosecutors in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania as a case study. He will discuss the challenges and obstacles faced by these reforms and explore their implications and value for the broader U.S. criminal justice system.
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