Joan Petersilia
![Joan Petersilia](https://law.stanford.edu/wp-content/uploads/2015/03/Petersilia_Joan-400x400.jpg)
- Adelbert H. Sweet Professor of Law, Emerita
Biography
Dr. Joan Petersilia spent over 30 years studying the performance of U.S. criminal justice agencies and has been instrumental in affecting sentencing and corrections reform in California and throughout the United States. She is the author of 11 books about crime and public policy, and her research on parole reform, prisoner reintegration and sentencing policy has fueled changes in policies throughout the nation. A criminologist with a background in empirical research and social science, Dr. Petersilia was also faculty co-director for the Stanford Criminal Justice Center (SCJC), focusing on policies related to crime control, sentencing, and corrections, and developing nonpartisan analyses and recommendations intended to aid public officials, legal practitioners, and the public in understanding criminal justice policy at the state and national levels. She teaches classes at Stanford Law School on juvenile justice, prisons, community corrections, policy analysis, research methods, and criminal sentencing.
Professor Petersilia was recently honored with the prestigious Stockholm Prize in Criminology (the Nobel Prize in criminology) for her work on prisoner reentry and supporting ex-offenders following release from prison. As the most prestigious award that a criminologist can receive, the Stockholm Prize is awarded for outstanding achievements in criminological research conducted for the reduction of crime and the advancement of human rights. Dr. Petersilia was also awarded an honorary Doctor of Public Policy by the Pardee RAND Graduate School in 2014. Professor Petersilia was also chosen by Stanford University as the recipient of the 2013 Roland Volunteer Service Prize. The Roland prize recognizes a single Stanford faculty member annually who involves students in integrating academic scholarship with significant volunteer service to society. She also serves on the Faculty Steering Committee for Stanford’s Haas Center for Public Service.
Before joining the Stanford Law School faculty, Dr. Petersilia was a professor of criminology, law and society in the School of Social Ecology at the University of California, Irvine, and director of UCI’s Center for Evidence-Based Corrections. She also previously served as a special advisor to Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger, helping to reorganize juvenile and adult corrections and working with the California State Legislature to implement prison and parole reform. She chaired Governor Schwarzenegger’s Rehabilitation Strike Team and was also co-chair of California’s Expert Panel on Offender Programs. She continues to advise the California legislature on matters related to California’s Public Safety Realignment Law of 2011 (A.B. 109), the state’s historic attempt to downsize prisons and enhance rehabilitation. She is currently the co-principal investigator of four research grants designed to assess the impacts of A.B. 109. Results from those research projects were published in November 2013 and can be found on Stanford’s Criminal Justice Center website.
Dr. Petersilia is a former director of the Criminal Justice Program at the RAND Corporation; former president of the American Society of Criminology; former president of the California Association for Criminal Justice Research; former co-director of the National Research Council’s study on Community Supervision and Desistance from Crime; and former director of the National Research Council’s study on Crime Victims with Developmental Disabilities. In 2010, she was appointed by Attorney General Eric Holder to be a member of the Department of Justice Scientific Advisory Board. She was recently named co-editor of The Annual Review of Criminology.
Education
- BA (Sociology) Loyola University of Los Angeles (1972)
- MA (Sociology) The Ohio State University (1974)
- PhD (Criminology Law & Society) University of California Irvine (1990)
Related Organizations
Affiliations & Honors
- Recipient, Stanford 2013 Roland Prize
- 2014 Stockholm Prize in Criminology
- Doctor of Public Policy (honorary), Pardee RAND Graduate School
Faculty on Point | Prof. Joan Petersilia on Solving America's Prison Problem
Key Works
News
Why Sacramento Is Still Protesting Stephon Clark’s Death, One Year Later
Vox
Protests have not subsided in Sacramento, a week after city and state law enforcement concluded that the officers who shot and killed Stephon Clark did not commit a crime. Last week, hundreds of high school and college students from around Sacramento marched to the California state capitol building to protest…
Read More : Why Sacramento Is Still Protesting Stephon Clark’s Death, One Year Later