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    • American writer, sociologist, criminologist and social worker

      • Reuben Jonathan Miller (born in 1976) is an American writer, sociologist, criminologist and social worker. [ 1] He teaches at the University of Chicago in the Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice and in the Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity. He is also a research professor at the American Bar Foundation.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reuben_Jonathan_Miller
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  2. Reuben Jonathan Miller (born in 1976) is an American writer, sociologist, criminologist and social worker. [1] He teaches at the University of Chicago in the Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice and in the Department of Race, Diaspora, and Indigeneity.

  3. Feb 16, 2021 · By Reuben Jonathan Miller. February 16, 2021 7:00 AM EST. Miller is a sociologist, criminologist and a social worker who teaches at the University of Chicago in the School of Social Service...

    • Reuben Jonathan Miller
  4. Reuben Jonathan Miller is an Associate Professor in the University of Chicago Crown Family School and in the Department of Race, Diaspora and Indigeneity, and a Research Professor at the American Bar Foundation.

  5. Mar 25, 2021 · For the more than 20 million people with a felony record, incarceration doesn’t end at the prison gate. They enter what University of Chicago scholar Reuben Jonathan Miller calls the “afterlife” of mass incarceration.

  6. Oct 12, 2022 · Sociologist recognized for his research on the criminal justice systems human toll. Assoc. Prof. Reuben Jonathan Miller, a renowned sociologist who studies mass incarceration and how it shapes people’s lives, has been awarded a 2022 MacArthur Fellowship.

  7. Feb 2, 2021 · Perhaps one of the most tragic aspects of this reality, as Reuben Jonathan Miller explores in his impressive new book Halfway Home: Race, Punishment, and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration,...

  8. Reuben Jonathan Miller is an award-winning scholar and author on issues of crime, punishment, racism, and poverty. In 2021 he published Halfway Home: Race, Punishment and the Afterlife of Mass Incarceration, an ethnographic study of life in the era of mass incarceration.

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