REMINDER: ISRD Panels & Preconference Meeting of the ISRD Network at the European Society of Criminology meeting in Athens, Greece (September 3-7 2025)
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The ESC site is: http://www.eurocrim2025.com
- The ISRD project has six ISRD-related panels on Friday, September 5th. All the panels will take place in the same room: Communications Building (CN), CN 3106.
- ISRD Panel 1: New Insights–A Glimpse into the Forthcoming ISRD4 Book on Youth Crime in a Digital World Link
- ISRD Panel 2: Violence and Victimization Across Various Contexts. Link
- ISRD Panel 3: Family Dynamics and Social Identity in Youth Delinquency. Link
- ISRD Panel 4: Digital Deviance and Cross-Cultural Perspectives on Online Crime Link
- ISRD Panel 5: Internet Surveys of Adolescent Delinquency and Victimization: Methodological and Substantive Findings from the International Self-Report Delinquency Project (ISRD4) Link
- ISRD Panel 6: Advances in Understanding Juvenile Delinquency and Victimization: Comparative and Methodological Insights. Link
- You are also invited to participate in our pre-conference ISRD meeting of the ISRD network on Wednesday, September 3, 1400-1700 in Communications Building (CN), CN2106.
- The following panel may also be of interest to the ISRD network!
Twenty-Five Years of Successful Long-Term International Projects: Lessons Learned about Collaboration and Other Things We Did Not Know When We Started – Special Panel Celebrating 25 Years of ESC (Link) Thu, September 4, 9:30 to 10:45am, Deree | JSB Library, Floor: Upper level, ACG Events Hall
Abstract:
The European Society of Criminology was formally established 25 years ago to institutionalize the exchange of ideas, facilitate networking, and research collaboration among (primarily) European criminologists. The establishment of the ESC in 2000 represents one clear example of the internationalization of the criminological enterprise, but it is not the only one. That is, the 1990s to early 2000s also witnessed the emergence and development of several international collaborative criminological projects that continue to exist and flourish today: the International Crime Victim Survey (ICVS), the International Self-Report Delinquency project (ISRD), the European Sourcebook of Crime and Justice Statistics, and the Eurogang project. The purpose of the panel is (1) to explore how these projects developed, created collaborations, and managed to survive long-term; and (2) to highlight the substantive insights produced by these projects. The panel participants are scholars who have been involved in these projects from their early beginnings.