Assistant Professor
Pafford Social Science Building - Room 238
Office Hours
By appointment
- B.S., Bachelor of Social Work, University of Wisconsin - Madison, 2005
- M.S., Master of Science - Clinical Social Work, Columbia University, 2006
- PhD, Doctor of Philosophy - Criminology, Simon Fraser University, 2015
Spring 2021 Sections
- CRIM-2000 (Survey of Criminology) Section: 02
- CRIM-2245 (Juvenile Delinquency) Section: E01
- CRIM-4279 (Race and Crime) Section: E01
Fall 2020 Sections
- CRIM-2000 (Survey of Criminology) Section: 02
- CRIM-4279 (Race and Crime) Section: 01
- CRIM-4280 (Sex Offenders) Section: E02
- CRIM-6999 (Different Serial Killers) Section: E03
Summer 2020 Sections
- CRIM-2245 (Juvenile Delinquency) Section: E01
- CRIM-4279 (Race and Crime) Section: E01
Spring 2020 Sections
- CRIM-1100 (Intro to Criminal Justice) Section: E02
- CRIM-2245 (Juvenile Delinquency) Section: 01
- CRIM-4279 (Race and Crime) Section: 01
Fall 2019 Sections
- CRIM-2245 (Juvenile Delinquency) Section: E01
- CRIM-4279 (Race and Crime) Section: 01
- CRIM-4280 (Sex Offenders) Section: E02
Kolb, A. (2021). “Just Listen, People!”: Narrative as Resistance in Criminological Research. In J.A. Schlosser (Ed.) Prison Stories: Women Scholars’ Experiences Doing Research Behind Bars (pp. 67-84). Lanham, MD: The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing G
Kolb, A. & Palys, T. (2012). Are you Down?: Power relations and gender reconstruction among Latina gang members in Los Angeles. Journal of Gang Research, 20(1): 19-32.
Kolb, A. & Palys, T. (2016). Homegirls, Hoodrats and Hos: Co-constructing gang status through discourseand performance. International Journal for Crime, Justice, and Social Democracy, 5(4): 29-44. doi:10.5204/ijcjsd.v5i4.334. [View Publication External Resource]
Kolb, A. & Palys, T. (2018). Playing the part: Pseudo-families, wives, and the politics of relationships in women’s prisons in California. The Prison Journal, 98(6), 678-699. doi: 10.1177/0328855. [View Publication (PDF)]
Kolb, A., Palys, T., & Green, A. (2019). “When You’re Out, You’re Not Really Out”: Exiting Strategies among Gang-Affiliated Chicanas. The Journal of Public and Professional Sociology, 11(2), Article 4. [View Publication External Resource]
Race, class, and gender inequality in the criminal justice system
My research is multidisciplinary, and focuses on the intersection of race, class, and gender inequalities within the criminal justice system. Specifically, I focus on the unique issues that women of color face in corrections, their corporeal experiences within the carceral system, and their individual and collective mechanisms of agency.