About the Authors

Published date01 June 1999
Date01 June 1999
DOIhttp://doi.org/10.1177/0032885599079002009
Subject MatterArticles
THE PRISON JOURNAL / June 1999ABOUT THE AUTHORS
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
M.DouglasAnglin,Ph.D.,hasbeenconductingresearchonsubstanceabuse
and treatment evaluation since 1972 and is author or coauthor of more than
150 published articles. He has been project director or principal investigator
on more than 20 federally funded studies. He is currently the principal inves-
tigator and scientific codirector of the NIDA-funded UCLA Center for the
Study of Treatment Careers. He has served as an advisor to many prominent
treatment evaluation studies, including the Drug Abuse TreatmentOutcome
Study,the Federal Bureau of Prisons Drug Programs Evaluation Project, and
the Los Angeles Treatment Research Unit. Dr. Anglin received a Research
Scientist Development Award (DA00146) from NIDAin July 1990 that will
provide salary support through July 2000.
Richard W. Bateman, D.S.W., is a senior investigator at the Friends
Research Institute, Inc., in Baltimore, Maryland. He has an extensive back-
ground in social work administration and treatment, ranging from directing
public funded, statewide welfare programs to devising and monitoring drug
abuse prevention, and treatment projects targetinginner-city youth and adult
substance abusers under correctional supervision.
Kathleen J. Block, Ph.D., is an associate professor of criminal justice at the
University of Baltimore. Her publications are primarily in the areas of
women, crime, and corrections; and youth crime and juvenile justice. Her
most recent interest in on the intersection of families, crime, and criminal
justice.
Scott D. Camp’s interests include measuring organizational performance
and qualitative research methods. He receiveda Ph.D. in sociology from The
Pennsylvania State Universityin 1991. Dr. Camp’s ongoing research focuses
on the following two major substantive issue: the ability to use survey data
collected at the individual level to create indicators of organizational-level
processes, and determining the impact associated with privatizing public
prisons.His recent publications have appeared in The Prison Journal,Justice
Quarterly, and CorrectionsManagement Quarterly. He has a chapter sched-
uled to appear in Boundary Changes in Criminal Justice Organizations,Vol-
ume 2, Criminal Justice 2000 Series (sponsored by the National Institute of
Justice) on comparing private and public prisons.
THE PRISON JOURNAL, Vol.79 No. 2, June 1999 284-287
© 1999 Sage Publications, Inc.
284

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