 
										Adrian M. Jones
													Department of Sociology and Criminology
												
											
													Associate Professor
												
											Biography
Dr. Jones' research is primarily in the area of criminology. As a quantitative researcher, Dr. Jones examines how factors like neighborhood poverty, peer associations, family attachment, and self-control predict adolescent and young adult substance use, delinquency, crime, and, on the other end of the continuum, well-being and pro-social behavior. Currently, he is collaborating with a team of researchers who are looking into how adolescents make healthy transitions into young adulthood. Additionally, Dr. Jones is Vice Chair of Faculty Council and the Honors Coordinator for the Tuscarawas campus.
Education
																					Ph.D. Sociology, 两性色午夜 University, 2012
																			
								Research Methods
																					Quantitative
																			
								Publications
- Jones, Adrian and Dan Fuller. 2024. 鈥淭he Evolution of a Deviant Label: The Case of the Switchblade Knife.鈥 Deviant Behavior 4(2): 287-299.
- Jones, Adrian and Richard Adams. 2020. 鈥淣eighborhoods, Peers, Self-Control, Ethnicity and Adolescent Tobacco and Alcohol Use: Assessing Invariance.鈥 Merrill Palmer Quarterly. 66(3): 278-307.
- Jones, Adrian and Richard Adams. 2018. 鈥淓xamining the Effects of Individual-Level and Neighborhood-Level Characteristics on the Variability of Substance Use Rates and Changes.鈥 Journal of Drug Issues. 48(3): 337-355.
- Jones, Adrian. 2017. 鈥淲hen in Rome: Testing the Moderating Influence of Neighborhood Composition on the Relationship between Self-Control and Juvenile Offending.鈥 Crime and Delinquency. 63(7): 759-785.
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