Eric L. Sevigny, Ph.D. - aysps.gsu.edu · 2015 Outstanding Reviewer International Journal of Drug...
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Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.1
Eric L. Sevigny, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology
Georgia State University
Atlanta, GA 30303
Office: 404-413-1038 [email protected]
Google Scholar / Publons / ResearchGate EDUCATION
2006 Ph.D., Public and International Affairs, Graduate School of Public and
International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1993 B.A., Psychology, Middlebury College, Vermont
ACADEMIC & PROFESSIONAL POSITIONS
2015 – Pres. Associate Professor
Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology
Georgia State University
2011 – 2016 Adjunct Researcher
RAND Corporation
2014 – 2015 Associate Professor
Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice
University of South Carolina
2007 – 2014 Assistant Professor
Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice
University of South Carolina
2006 – 2007 Visiting Assistant Professor
School of Criminal Justice
Michigan State University
2005 – 2006 Adjunct Professor
Administration of Justice and Legal Studies Programs
University of Pittsburgh
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.2
2000 – 2003 Graduate Assistant
Graduate School of Public and International Affairs
University of Pittsburgh
1998 – 2000 Project Manager/Research Assistant
North Charles Research and Planning Group (Cambridge, MA)
1994 – 1998 Program Supervisor/Counselor
Northeastern Family Institute (Danvers, MA)
HONORS & AWARDS
2016 Publons Sentinel of Science Award
Awarded to Top 10 Percent of Researchers Contributing to Peer Review in
the Social Sciences (Oct. 2015 - Sept. 2016)
2015 Outstanding Reviewer
International Journal of Drug Policy
2014 Undergraduate Research Mentor Award Nominee
Office of the Vice President for Research and Office of Undergraduate
Research, University of South Carolina
2010 Promising Investigator Research Award
Office of Research and Graduate Education, University of South Carolina
2010 Two Thumbs Up Teaching Award
Office of Student Disability Services, University of South Carolina
2008 Outstanding Faculty Publication
Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of South
Carolina
2005 Plenary Speaker
Release Drugs Conference, London, UK
2003 Lawrence Cabot Howard Doctoral Research Award
University of Pittsburgh
2002 Christine Mirzayan Science and Technology Graduate Policy Fellow
Committee to Review Research and Data on Firearms, National Academy
of Sciences
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.3
PUBLICATIONS
Refereed Publications
Sevigny, Eric L. and Gary Zhang. (In Press). Do Barriers to Crime Prevention Moderate
the Effects of Situational Crime Prevention Policies on Violent Crime in High
Schools? Journal of School Violence.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2017). Marijuana Liberalization, Research, and Policy: Contributions to
Current Knowledge and Practice. Journal of Primary Prevention 38(3): 211-216.
Sevigny, Eric L. and Michaela Saisana. (2016). Measuring Interstate Variations in the
Consequences of Illegal Drugs: A Composite Indicator Approach. Social Indicators
Research. 128: 501-529.
Hester, Rhys and Eric L. Sevigny. (2016). Court Communities in Local Context: A
Multilevel Analysis of Felony Sentencing in South Carolina. Journal of Crime and
Justice 39(1): 55-74.
Reprinted: Jennifer H. Peck. (2017). Race and Ethnicity in the Juvenile and
Criminal Justice Systems: Contemporary Issues of Offending Behavior and
Judicial Responses. New York: Routledge.
Sevigny, Eric L. and Andrea Allen. (2015). Gun Carrying Among Drug Market
Participants: Evidence from Incarcerated Drug Offenders. Journal of Quantitative
Criminology 31(3): 435-458.
Pacula, Rosalie L., David Powell, Paul Heaton, and Eric L. Sevigny. (2015). Assessing the
Effects of Medical Marijuana Laws on Marijuana Use: The Devil is in the Details.
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management. 34(1): 7-31.
Ferdik, Frank V., Robert K. Kaminski, Mikaela Cooney, and Eric L. Sevigny. (2014). The
Influence of Agency Policies on Conducted Energy Device Use and Police Use of
Lethal Force. Police Quarterly 17(4): 328-358.
Koons-Witt, Barbara, Eric L. Sevigny, John D. Burrow, and Rhys Hester. (2014). Gender
and Sentencing Outcomes in South Carolina: Examining the Interactions with
Race, Age, and Offense Type. Criminal Justice Policy Review 25(3): 298-323.
Thrasher, James F., James D. Sargent, Rosa Vargas, Sandra Braun, Tonatiuh Barrientos-
Gutierrez, Eric L. Sevigny, Deborah L. Billings, Edna Arillo-Santillán, Ashley
Navarro, and James Hardin. (2014). Are Movies with Tobacco, Alcohol, Drugs,
Sex, and Violence Rated for Youth? A Comparison of Rating Systems in Argentina,
Brazil, Mexico, and the United States. International Journal of Drug Policy 25(2):
267-275.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.4
Sevigny, Eric L., Rosalie L. Pacula, and Paul Heaton. (2014). The Effects of Medical
Marijuana Laws on Potency. International Journal of Drug Policy 25(2): 308-319.
Pacula, Rosalie L. and Eric L. Sevigny. (2014). Marijuana Liberalization Policies: Why
We Can’t Learn Much from Policy Still in Motion. Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management 33(1): 212-221.
Pacula, Rosalie L. and Eric L. Sevigny. (2014). Natural Experiments in a Complex and
Dynamic Environment: The Need for a Measured Assessment of the Evidence.
Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 33(1): 232-235.
Sevigny, Eric L., Brian K. Fuleihan, and Frank V. Ferdik. (2013). Do Drug Courts Reduce
the Use of Incarceration?: A Meta-Analysis. Journal of Criminal Justice 41(6):
416-425.
Sevigny, Eric L., Harold A. Pollack, and Peter Reuter. (2013). Can Drug Courts Help to
Reduce Prison and Jail Populations? The Annals of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science 647(1): 190-212.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2013). Is Today’s Marijuana More Potent Simply Because It’s Fresher?
Drug Testing and Analysis 5(1): 62-67.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2011). The U.S. Sentencing Commission Should Make Its Special Data
Collections Readily Available to Outside Researchers. Federal Sentencing
Reporter 23(4): 277.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2009). Excessive Uniformity in Federal Drug Sentencing. Journal of
Quantitative Criminology 25(2): 155-180.
Sevigny, Eric L. and Phyllis D. Coontz. (2008). Patterns of Substance Involvement and
Criminal Behavior: A Gender-Based Cluster Analysis of Pennsylvania Arrestees.
International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology 52(4):
435-453.
Reprinted: John Goodwin (Ed.). (2012). SAGE Secondary Data Analysis, Volume
II (pp. 211-230). Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
Caulkins, Jonathan P. and Eric L. Sevigny. (2005). How Many People Does the U.S.
Imprison for Drug Use, and Who Are They? Contemporary Drug Problems 32(3):
405-428.
Sevigny, Eric L. and Jonathan P. Caulkins. (2004). Kingpins or Mules: An Analysis of
Drug Offenders Incarcerated in Federal and State Prisons. Criminology and Public
Policy 3(3): 401-434.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.5
Book Chapters
Sevigny, Eric L. and Brian K. Fuleihan (2016). Measurement and Design Challenges in
the Study of Drugs and Society. In Henry H. Brownstein (Ed.), Wiley Handbook on
Drugs and Society (pp. 258-281). Malden, MA: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Caulkins, Jonathan P. and Eric L. Sevigny. (2013). The U.S. Causes but Cannot (or Will
Not) Solve Mexico’s Drug Problems. In Tony Payan, Kathy Staudt, and Z. Anthony
Kruszewski (Eds.), A War That Can’t Be Won: Binational Perspectives on the War
on Drugs (pp. 285-310). Tucson, AZ: University of Arizona Press.
Pollack, Harold A., Peter Reuter, and Eric L. Sevigny. (2011). If Drug Treatment Works
So Well, Why Are So Many Drug Users in Prison? In Philip J. Cook, Jens Ludwig,
and Justin McCrary (Eds.), Controlling Crime: Strategies and Tradeoffs (pp. 125-
159). Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2011). Alaska Laws and Programs. In Mark Kleiman and James Hawdon
(Eds.), Encyclopedia of Drug Policy (pp. 10-12). Newbury Park, CA: Sage
Publications.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2011). Analogue (Designer Drug) Act. In Mark Kleiman and James
Hawdon (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Drug Policy (pp. 26-27). Newbury Park, CA: Sage
Publications.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2011). Schedule of Controlled Substances. In Mark Kleiman and James
Hawdon (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Drug Policy (pp. 713-716). Newbury Park, CA:
Sage Publications.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2011). South Carolina Laws and Programs. In Mark Kleiman and James
Hawdon (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Drug Policy (pp. 736-737). Newbury Park, CA:
Sage Publications.
Reports and Professional Publications
Caces, M. Fe, Eric L. Sevigny, and Ra Kwang. (2017). Drug-Involved Driving among
Motor Vehicle Operators in Fatal Crashes in the United States: 2005-2014.
Washington DC: Office of National Drug Control Strategy, Executive Office of the
President.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2015). Design Considerations for a Prescription Drug Consequences
Index. Washington, DC: Office of National Drug Control Policy, Executive Office
of the President.
Sevigny, Eric L. and Michaela Saisana. (2013). Developing the U.S. Drug Consequences
Indices 2000-2009. Washington, DC: Office of National Drug Control Policy,
Executive Office of the President.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.6
Pollack, Harold, Eric L. Sevigny, and Peter Reuter. (2013). How to Make Drug Courts
Work. The Washington Post Wonkblog (April 26, 2013).
Caulkins, Jonathan P. and Eric L. Sevigny. (2010). The Effects of Drug Enforcement and
Imprisonment on Transit Countries: The Case of the U.S. and Mexico. In Sidney
Weintraub and Duncan Wood (Eds.), Cooperative Mexican-U.S. Antinarcotics
Efforts: A Report of the CSIS Simon Chair in Political Economy (pp. 98-126).
Washington, DC: Center for Strategic and International Studies.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2010). Performance Assessment of the Lexington County Sheriff’s
Department COPS Methamphetamine Initiative. Final Report to the Lexington
County Sheriff’s Department, Lexington County, South Carolina.
Sevigny, Eric L. (2008). Methamphetamine in South Carolina: A Report on Trends and
Impact. Final Report to the South Carolina Meth Project, South Carolina Office of
the Attorney General.
RESEARCH GRANTS
2016-2017 Principal Investigator
Developing a Heroin/Opioid Policy Index Comparing Laws and
Regulations in Australia and the United States, Faculty International
Partnership Engagement Grant to Leverage External Funding, Georgia
State University ($3,820)
2015-2016 Principal Investigator
Assessing the Congruence of Estimates of Drug-Related Emergency
Department Visits Produced by the Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN)
and the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP): Can HCUP Fill
the Gap Left By DAWN?, Office of National Drug Control Policy, Executive
Office of the President ($149,132)
2015-2016 Principal Investigator
Analysis of Drug-Involved Driving Data from the Fatality Analysis
Reporting System: An Update and Extension through 2014, Office of
National Drug Control Policy, Executive Office of the President ($64,916)
2011-2015 Investigator (PI: Rosalie Liccardo Pacula)
Implementation of Medical Marijuana and its Impact on Health, RAND
Corporation, pass-through funding from the National Institute on Drug
Abuse (Project Total: $2,861,677)
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.7
2013-2014 Principal Investigator
Analysis of Drug-Involved Driving Data from the Fatality Analysis
Reporting System: An Update and Extension, Office of National Drug
Control Policy, Executive Office of the President ($49,788)
2012-2014 Principal Investigator
Constructing a Prescription Drug Consequences Index, Office of National
Drug Control Policy, Executive Office of the President ($49,939)
2010-2012 Principal Investigator
Constructing a Drug Consequences Index, Office of National Drug Control
Policy, Executive Office of the President ($152,187)
2010-2011 Principal Investigator
Constructing a Composite Index to Measure the Harm from Illegal Drugs
Promising Investigator Research Award, Office of Research and Graduate
Education, University of South Carolina ($19,946)
2009-2010 Principal Investigator (Co-PI: Michael Smith)
Lexington County Methamphetamine Initiative Evaluation, Lexington
County (SC) Sheriff’s Department, pass-through funding from the U.S.
Department of Justice, Office of Community Oriented Policing Services
($31,526)
2007-2008 Co-Principal Investigator (Co-PI: Barbara Koons-Witt)
The Impact of a Community Corrections Drug Testing and Sanctions
Program on Offender Drug Use, Recidivism, and Social Functioning: A
Pilot Investigation, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice,
University of South Carolina ($9,942)
PRESENTATIONS
Invited Talks and Workshops
Meylakhs, Peter and Eric L. Sevigny. (May 2017). “Development of a Global Policy Index
Measuring National Commitments to HIV Prevention and Treatment among People
Who Inject Drugs.” International Society for the Study of Drug Policy, 10th Annual
Conference, Aarhus, Denmark.
Sevigny, Eric L. (February 2017). “Drug Courts and Incarceration: A Fresh Look.” Panel
on Drug Courts, Solomon Center on Health Law and Policy, Yale University, New
Haven, CT.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.8
Sevigny, Eric L. (May 2015). “Composite Indicators in the Drug Field:
Insights from the U.S. Drug Consequences Indices.” International Society for the
Study of Drug Policy, 9th Annual Conference, Ghent, Belgium.
Sevigny, Eric L. (April 2015). “Design Considerations for a Prescription Drug
Consequences Index.” Agency Briefing, Office of National Drug Control Policy,
Washington, DC.
Sevigny, Eric L. (April 2015). “Pipeline or Diversion: Drug Courts as an Alternative to
Incarceration.” Thirteenth United Nations Congress on Crime Prevention and
Criminal Justice, Doha, Qatar.
Sevigny, Eric L. (August 2012). “Measuring National Trends and Interstate Variations in
the Consequences of Illegal Drugs Using the U.S. Drug Consequences Indices:
2000-2009.” Federal Interagency Briefing, Office of National Drug Control Policy,
Washington, DC.
Sevigny, Eric L., Harold A. Pollack, and Peter Reuter. (July 2012). “Can Drug Courts Help
Reduce Prison and Jail Populations?” RAND Drug Policy Research Center, Brown
Bag Seminar, Washington, DC.
Sevigny, Eric L. (December 2009). “Methamphetamine in South Carolina.” 6th Annual
South Carolina Drugs of Abuse Conference, Columbia, SC.
Sevigny, Eric L. (January 2005). “Incarceration: Kingpins or Mules?” Drugs University IV
Conference, Release, London, UK.
Contributed Presentations (Recent)
Sevigny, Eric L. and William King. (June 2017). “Traditional Dissertations vs. Series of
Papers.” Association of Doctoral Programs in Criminology and Criminal Justice
Graduate Directors Summit, East Lansing, MI.
Sevigny, Eric L. (November 2016). “Police Use of Force and Suspect Injury: The
Mediating Role of Drug and Alcohol Intoxication.” American Society of
Criminology, 68th Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA.
Sevigny, Eric L. (May 2016). “Global Trends in Cannabis Potency: A Systematic Review
and Meta-Regression.” International Society for the Study of Drug Policy, 10th
Annual Conference, Sydney, Australia.
Sevigny, Eric L. (April 2016). “The Effects of State Marijuana Laws on Marijuana-
Involved Driving: Evidence from the U.S. Fatality Analysis Reporting System.”
Cannabis Science and Policy Summit, New York, NY.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.9
Sevigny, Eric L. (May 2015). “Medical Marijuana Laws and Traffic Fatalities. The Effects
of Per Se Drugged Driving and Medical Marijuana Laws on Drug-Related Traffic
Fatalities in the United States, 1990-2012.” International Society for the Study of
Drug Policy, 9th Annual Conference, Ghent, Belgium.
Sevigny, Eric L. (November 2014). “Medical Marijuana by the Numbers.” American
Society of Criminology, 66th Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA.
M. Fe Caces, Eric L. Sevigny, Kwang Hyun Ra, Terry Zobeck, and Karen Rank. (August
2014). “Trends in Drug-involved Driver Fatalities in the United States, 2005-
2012.” 2014 Joint Statistical Meetings, Boston, MA.
Sevigny, Eric L. (May 2014). “Medical Marijuana by the Numbers.” International Society
for the Study of Drug Policy, 8th Annual Conference, Rome, Italy.
Sevigny, Eric L. (November 2013). “The U.S. Heroin and Methamphetamine
Consequences Indices: Interstate Variations and Association with State Policies.”
American Society of Criminology, 65th Annual Meeting, Atlanta, GA.
Sevigny, Eric L., Rosalie Liccardo Pacula, and Paul Heaton. (May 2013). “The Effects of
State Marijuana Policies on Potency.” International Society for the Study of Drug
Policy, 7th Annual Conference, Bogota, Colombia.
Pacula, Rosalie Liccardo, David Powell, Paul Heaton, and Eric L. Sevigny. (May 2013).
“Assessing the Effects of Medical Marijuana Laws on Marijuana and Alcohol Use:
The Devil is in the Details.” International Society for the Study of Drug Policy, 7th
Annual Conference, Bogota, Colombia.
Pollack, Harold A., Eric L. Sevigny, and Peter Reuter. (May 2013). “Aging Drug-Use
Cohorts in the American Correctional System.” International Society for the Study
of Drug Policy, 7th Annual Conference, Bogota, Colombia.
Fuleihan, Brian, Frank V. Ferdik, and Eric L. Sevigny. (November 2012). “Do Drug Courts
Conserve Custodial Resources? A Meta-Analysis.” American Society of
Criminology, 64th Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL.
Sevigny, Eric L. (November 2012). “The Effects of State Medical Marijuana Policies on
Cannabis Potency and Quality: Evidence from Seized Samples.” American Society
of Criminology, 64th Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL.
Sevigny, Eric L. (November 2012). “The Limited Contribution Currently Made by Drug
Courts.” American Society of Criminology, 64th Annual Meeting, Chicago, IL.
Sevigny, Eric L. (May 2012). “Comparing Drug-Related Consequences across Time and
States: Evidence from the U.S. Drug Consequences Index Project.” International
Society for the Study of Drug Policy, 6th Annual Conference, Canterbury, UK.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.10
COURSES TAUGHT
Georgia State University (2015 – Present)
Applied Regression Analysis (G)
Contemporary Criminal Justice Policy (G)
Statistics in Criminal Justice II (G)
Criminal Justice Policy Analysis (U)
University of South Carolina (2007 - 2015)
Drugs and Crime (U)
Illegal Drug Films and Society (U)
Research Methods in Criminal Justice (U)
Punishment and Society (U/G)
Crime, Law, and Public Policy (G)
Quantitative Methods in Criminal Justice (G)
Practical Secondary Data Analysis (G)
Research Methods in Criminal Justice (G)
Michigan State University (2006 - 2007)
Drugs, Policy, and the Law (U)
Research Methods in Criminal Justice (U)
University of Pittsburgh (2005 - 2006) Drugs, Policy, and the Law (U)
STUDENT MENTORSHIP
Doctoral Dissertations
Chair
Travis Jones (In Progress). Untitled Dissertation on Cryptomarkets, University of South
Carolina.
Rhys Hester (2012). “Criminal Sentencing in the Court Communities of South Carolina:
An Examination of Offender, Judge, and County Characteristics,” University of South
Carolina.
• Recipient of the Dera D. Parkinson Fellowship for excellence in graduate study,
research, and scholarship
Committee Member
Joy D. Burns, M.Ed. (In Progress). Untitled Dissertation on Female Reentry, Georgia State
University, School of Public Health
Brian K. Fuleihan (In Progress). “Applying the Drug Court Model to Adolescents:
Viewpoints of Juvenile Drug Court Teams in South Carolina,” University of South
Carolina.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.11
Gary Zhang (In Progress). Untitled Dissertation on School Violence, University of South
Carolina.
Xueyi Xing (2016). “The Impact of Deinstitutionalization on Murders of Law Enforcement
Officers,” University of South Carolina.
Katanya Goswell (2014). “Gender Similarities and Differences among a Sample of Jail
Detainees,” Fielding Graduate University.
Master’s Theses
Chair
Michael Rosen. (In Progress). “Morality of Gangs: Assessing Moral Disengagement and
its Effect on the Association between Gang Affiliation and Criminal Offending.” Georgia
State University.
Kirsten Hill. (In Progress). “Assessing the Association between Movie Depictions of
Marijuana and Use of Marijuana by Youth and Young Adults.” Georgia State University.
Megan A. Novak. (2015). “Criminology on Crimes against Humanity: A North Korean
Case Study.” University of South Carolina.
Committee Member
Cory M. Thigpen (2008). “South Carolina Police Perspectives on Illicit Drugs and Drug
Enforcement: Results from a Statewide Agency Survey.” University of South Carolina.
Graduate Internships/Independent Studies
Thaddeus Johnson. (Spring 2017). “Examining the Effect of Educational Attainment on
Police Incivility and Misconduct.” Georgia State University.
Brian Fuleihan. (Spring 2012). “Do Drug Courts Conserve Custodial Resources?”
University of South Carolina.
Allison Carter. (Spring 2011). “The Effects of Incarceration on Crime.” University of
South Carolina.
Rhys Hester. (Spring 2010). “Criminal Courts and Sentencing.” University of South
Carolina.
Graduate Internships Supervised
Caambridge Horton. (Fall 2016). “Small Creek Alliance: The Good, the Bad, the Ugly.”
Georgia State University.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.12
Undergraduate Independent Studies
Mary Eakin. (Summer 2017). “Mental Illness among Juveniles in the Justice System: Best
Practices on Arresting the Transition to Adult Offending.” Georgia State University.
Mahamoudou Kaba. (Summer 2015). “Boko Haram and Drug Trafficking.” University of
South Carolina.
Brittney Brown. (Spring 2014). “Trends and Patterns in Illicit Methamphetamine
Manufacturing in Lexington County, SC.” University of South Carolina.
Michael Calandra. (Summer 2012). “The Cannabis Potency Monitoring Project.”
University of South Carolina.
James Dennis, Jr. (Summer 2009). “Policing and Drug Raids: A Constitutional and
Empirical Assessment.” University of South Carolina.
Undergraduate Research Mentorship
Jared Greathouse. (2017-18). “Drug Enforcement and Violence: Protocol for an Updated
Systematic Review and Meta-Regression.” University Assistantship Program, Honors
College, Georgia State University.
Hunter Dayton. (2014). “The Content of Tablets Sold as Ecstasy: Evidence from an Online
Testing Service.” Magellan Apprentice and Magellan Mini-Grant Awardee, Office of
Undergraduate Research, University of South Carolina.
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE
Guest Editor
Journal of Primary Prevention, Special Issue on Cannabis Policy (2016-2017)
Journal Editorial Boards
Associate Editor, Journal of Drug Policy Analysis (2011 – Present)
Editorial Board, Victims and Offenders (2010 – Present)
Editorial Board, Journal of Quantitative Criminology (2013 – 2015)
Expert Panels and Consultations
Assessing the Impact of Different Regulatory Frameworks, Expert Consultation on Drug
Regulation, Beckley Foundation, Rome, Italy (2014)
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.13
Measurement of Drug-Related Crime, Drugs and Crime Project Workshop, Office of
National Drug Control Policy, Washington, DC (2011)
Professional Organization Service
Scientific Organizing Committee, 11th Annual Conference, International Society for the
Study of Drug Policy, Aarhus, Denmark (2017).
Paper Reviewer, The Cannabis Science & Policy Summit, New York University, New
York, NY (2016).
Scientific Organizing Committee, 10th Annual Conference, International Society for the
Study of Drug Policy, Sydney, Australia (2016).
Scientific Organizing Committee & Nominations Committee, 9th Annual Conference,
International Society for the Study of Drug Policy, Ghent, Belgium (2015).
Scientific Organizing Committee, 8th Annual Conference, International Society for the
Study of Drug Policy, Rome, Italy (2014).
Scientific Organizing Committee, 7th Annual Conference, International Society for the
Study of Drug Policy, Bogota, Columbia (2013).
Program Committee, Sub-Area Chair for Drug Enforcement, 61st Annual Meeting,
American Society of Criminology, Philadelphia, PA (2009).
External Reviewer: Grants and Manuscripts
Agencies and Organizations:
• Zoukis Best Paper Award Committee, Georgia State University (2016)
• National Institute of Justice (2015, 2013)
• Public Safety Performance Project, The Pew Charitable Trusts (2014)
• RAND Corporation (2013, 2010)
• Office of the Vice President for Research, University of South Carolina (2011)
• Johnson Institute for Responsible Leadership, University of Pittsburgh (2006)
Journals:
• 65 total reviews for 32 different journals in the fields of criminology, policy, and
public health, including International Journal of Drug Policy, Criminology, Justice
Quarterly, Journal of Quantitative Criminology, Criminal Justice Policy Review,
and Addiction.
• Ranked in the 98th percentile for verified peer-review contributions on Publons
through February 2017.
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.14
UNIVERSITY SERVICE
Member, Triennial Evaluation Committee for the Chair of the Department of Criminal
Justice and Criminology, Georgia State University (2017)
2CI Search Committee, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Georgia State
University (2017)
Director of Graduate Studies, Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Georgia
State University (2016 – Present)
Faculty Judge, Undergraduate Research Conference, Georgia State University (2017,
2016)
Chair, Scholarship and Awards Committee, Department of Criminal Justice and
Criminology, Georgia State University (2015 – Present)
Panel Moderator, Zoukis Summer Institute on Juvenile Justice, Georgia State University
(2016)
Faculty Associate, Carolina Student Judicial Council, University of South Carolina (2007
– 2015)
Departmental Bylaws Committee, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice,
University of South Carolina (2014 – 2015)
Graduate Committee, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of
South Carolina (2014 – 2015, 2008 – 2010)
Faculty Mentor, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University of South
Carolina (2014 – 2015)
Faculty Judge, Graduate Student Day, University of South Carolina (2015, 2014, 2013)
Faculty Advisor, Alpha Sigma Phi Chapter of Lambda Alpha Epsilon, the American
Criminal Justice Association, University of South Carolina (2011 – 2014)
University Review Committee, Advanced Support Program for Innovative Research
Excellence-I (ASPIRE-I), Office of the Vice President for Research, University of South
Carolina (2012)
Undergraduate Committee, Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, University
of South Carolina (2007 – 2008)
Judge, USC Region II Science and Engineering Fair, University of South Carolina (2008)
Eric L. Sevigny Vita (August 2017) p.15
Judicial Board Member, Student Judicial System, University of Pittsburgh (2004 – 2006)
COMMUNITY SERVICE
Workgroup Member, South Carolina State Epidemiological Outcomes Workgroup, South
Carolina Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services (2015, 2009–2012)
Speaker, American Constitution Society, USC Chapter, Columbia SC (2013)
Speaker, ACLU Advocacy and Activism Workshop, Columbia, SC (2010)
Advisor, League of Women Voters of the Charleston Area (2010)
Advisor, SC Meth Project, South Carolina Office of the Attorney General (2008)
CURRENT PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
American Society of Criminology
International Society for the Study of Drug Policy