30 min

"Spaciality, Solvability, and Criminality Factors in Missing Persons Cases" ft. Justine Collin-Santerre Missing Persons Research Hub Podcast

    • Education

Episode 3 of the Missing Persons Research Hub Podcast features Justine Collin-Santerre discussing her research on spatial patterns, solvability, and criminality in missing persons cases. Through these topics, Justine outlines her dissertation work, which combines these three critical themes related to missingness. She also talks about her recent presentation at Criminology Consortium, an international Criminology conference, wherein she talked about her research on typologies of missing persons in the news. 

Speaker bio:

Justine Collin-Santerre is a PhD Student in Criminology at the School of Criminology at Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada. She received her BSc and MSc in Criminology from Université Laval (QC, Canada). Justine's thesis is on missing persons. She specializes in arson, criminal behaviour, latent class analysis, spatial analysis, environmental criminology, sexual offending, persistence of sexual behaviour, wrongful convictions, criminal decisions, police strategies and impacts, and, Aboriginals penal path. Her master's thesis aimed to identify non-serial and serial arsonists' crime scene and motivations, in collaboration with local and provincial police forces. Most of the research projects that she worked on aimed at developing better investigative practices and crime prevention. Her research topic has been published in peer-reviewed journals in her field and has been the subject of many local, national and international presentations. She is currently writing papers on missing persons, sexual offending, arsonists and wrongful convictions.

Email: justine.collin-santerre@umontreal.ca

Twitter: https://twitter.com/CS_Justt

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Follow the Hub on Twitter @MPRHCanada or Instagram @MPRHCanada, or check out www.missingpersonsresearchhub.com.

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The Missing Persons Research Hub (the Hub) is a national networking forum and research hub for the field of missing persons in Canada. This podcast is hosted by Lorna Ferguson (@LFrgsn) and features a variety of personnel involved in missing persons work across Canada.

Episode 3 of the Missing Persons Research Hub Podcast features Justine Collin-Santerre discussing her research on spatial patterns, solvability, and criminality in missing persons cases. Through these topics, Justine outlines her dissertation work, which combines these three critical themes related to missingness. She also talks about her recent presentation at Criminology Consortium, an international Criminology conference, wherein she talked about her research on typologies of missing persons in the news. 

Speaker bio:

Justine Collin-Santerre is a PhD Student in Criminology at the School of Criminology at Université de Montréal, Quebec, Canada. She received her BSc and MSc in Criminology from Université Laval (QC, Canada). Justine's thesis is on missing persons. She specializes in arson, criminal behaviour, latent class analysis, spatial analysis, environmental criminology, sexual offending, persistence of sexual behaviour, wrongful convictions, criminal decisions, police strategies and impacts, and, Aboriginals penal path. Her master's thesis aimed to identify non-serial and serial arsonists' crime scene and motivations, in collaboration with local and provincial police forces. Most of the research projects that she worked on aimed at developing better investigative practices and crime prevention. Her research topic has been published in peer-reviewed journals in her field and has been the subject of many local, national and international presentations. She is currently writing papers on missing persons, sexual offending, arsonists and wrongful convictions.

Email: justine.collin-santerre@umontreal.ca

Twitter: https://twitter.com/CS_Justt

---

Follow the Hub on Twitter @MPRHCanada or Instagram @MPRHCanada, or check out www.missingpersonsresearchhub.com.

---

The Missing Persons Research Hub (the Hub) is a national networking forum and research hub for the field of missing persons in Canada. This podcast is hosted by Lorna Ferguson (@LFrgsn) and features a variety of personnel involved in missing persons work across Canada.

30 min

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