Dr. Maroun began at Endicott in 2017 after completing her doctoral work at the University of Massachusetts, Lowell. Her primary research interests include juvenile justice policy and practice, race and ethnicity and justice, sentencing, and offender re-entry. She has published research concerning the impact of contextual factors, such as neighborhood concentrated disadvantage, on juvenile sentencing outcomes. She advises the Law & Justice Club.
University of Massachusetts, Lowell
Doctor of Philosophy in Criminology & Justice Studies
2017
University of Massachusetts, Lowell
Master of Arts in Criminal Justice
2015
Saint Anselm College
Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice
2013
CJ 100 Introduction to Criminal Justice
CJ 200 Criminology
CJ 300 Juvenile Justice
CJ 325 Wrongful Convictions
CJ 302 Research Methods
CJ 355 Race and Justice
Essex County Sheriff’s Department, Middleton, MA
Essex County Mental Health Diversion Program, BJA JMHCP Award# 2019-MO-BX0020
Co-evaluator, grant period 2020-2024
Crime & Delinquency, Executive Editorial Board member
Maroun, R., Siegel, L.J., Bartollas, C. (2023). Corrections Today. Cengage Publishing. (textbook)
Jordan, K. L., & Maroun, R. (2021). Examining the impact of racial/ethnic threat on juvenile court outcomes: A multi-level approach. Journal of Crime and Justice, 45(4), 450-466. doi:10.1080/0735648X.2021.1996441
Maroun, R. (2019). Contextual characteristics in juvenile sentencing: Examining the impact of concentrated disadvantage on youth court outcomes. London: Routledge.