Please feel free to reach out for PDF copies. Otherwise, you can download them from my academia.edu page.

Presenting at the Drug Policy Alliance (DPA) conference, “Reducing Harms of Drug Use Upstate.”

Books

America’s Horror Stories U.S. History through Dark Tourism. Routledge [w/ Favian Martín] (2025).

Journal Articles & Book Chapters

“Not One More Dollar Goes Into this Jail”: Becoming Abolitionists in Upstate New York. The Jail is Everywhere: Fighting the New Geography of Mass Incarceration [w/ Andrew Pragacz) (2024).

Figuring Things Out: Contemplating Drug Addiction and Disclosure In and Out of the Field. Contemporary Drug Problems (2022).

“Without Drug Court, You’ll End Up in Prison or Dead”: Therapeutic Surveillance and Addiction Narratives in Treatment Court. Critical Criminology (2021).

The ‘Worst of the Worst’: Punitive Justice Frames in Criminal Sentencing Clips on YouTube. Contemporary Justice Review (2021).

“A Life Lived”: Collective Memory and White Racial Framing in Digital Opioid Overdose. Contemporary Drug Problems (2020).

“Now You’re Connected”: Carceral Visuality and Police Power on MobilePatrol. Theoretical Criminology (2020).

“Once Again, a Meth Lab Exploded and Somebody Died”: Narratives of Volatility and Risk in the Rural Drug War. Crime, Media, Culture (2018).

 Media and the New War on Drugs: Governing through Meth. After Prisons? Freedom, Decarceration, and Justice Disinvestment [w/ Chungse Jung and William G. Martin] (2016).

 

Book & Film Reviews

Policing the Pandemic: How Public Health Becomes Public Order by Lambros Fatsis and Melayna Lamb. Crime, Media, Culture (2022).

Pacifying the Homeland: Intelligence Fusion and Mass Supervision by Brendan McQuade. Journal of Criminal Justice Education (2020).

High: Drugs, Desire & a Nation of Users by Ingrid Walker. Contemporary Justice Review (2018).

Meth Storm by Craig Renaud and Brent Renaud (dirs.). Crime, Media, Culture (2018).

Meth Wars: Police, Media, Power by Travis Linnemann. Critical Criminology (2017).

Occupying New Levels: A Comparative Review of Occupy Nation and Networks of Outrage and Hope by Todd Gitlin and Manuel Castells. Peace and Conflict Studies (2013).