Latino employment and Black violence: The unintended consequence of US immigration policy ES Shihadeh, RE Barranco Social Forces 88 (3), 1393-1420, 2010 | 126 | 2010 |
Do school resource officers really refer juveniles to the juvenile justice system for less serious offenses? DC May, R Barranco, E Stokes, AA Robertson, SH Haynes Criminal justice policy review 29 (1), 89-105, 2018 | 92 | 2018 |
Latino immigration, economic deprivation, and violence: Regional differences in the effect of linguistic isolation ES Shihadeh, RE Barranco Homicide Studies 14 (3), 336-355, 2010 | 92 | 2010 |
The imperative of place: Homicide and the new Latino migration ES Shihadeh, RE Barranco The Sociological Quarterly 54 (1), 81-104, 2013 | 83 | 2013 |
Suicide, religion, and Latinos: A macrolevel study of US Latino suicide rates RE Barranco The Sociological Quarterly 57 (2), 256-281, 2016 | 51 | 2016 |
Walking ATMs and the immigration spillover effect: The link between Latino immigration and robbery victimization RE Barranco, ES Shihadeh Social science research 52, 440-450, 2015 | 49 | 2015 |
A comparison of hometown socioeconomics and demographics for black and white elite football players in the US R Allison, A Davis, R Barranco International Review for the Sociology of Sport 53 (5), 615-629, 2018 | 48 | 2018 |
Latino immigration, interaction, and homicide victimization RE Barranco Sociological Spectrum 33 (6), 534-553, 2013 | 47 | 2013 |
Leveraging the power of the ethnic enclave: Residential instability and violence in Latino communities ES Shihadeh, RE Barranco Sociological Spectrum 30 (3), 249-269, 2010 | 45 | 2010 |
‘A rich white kid sport?’Hometown socioeconomic, racial, and geographic composition among US women’s professional soccer players R Allison, R Barranco Soccer & Society 22 (5), 457-469, 2021 | 34 | 2021 |
Low skill jobs and rural violence: The link between Hispanic employment and non-Hispanic homicide ES Shihadeh, RE Barranco Deviant Behavior 31 (5), 411-439, 2010 | 29* | 2010 |
Revisiting violence in new destinations: Exploring the drop in Latino homicide victimization in emerging immigrant communities, 2000 to 2010 R Barranco, CT Harris, B Feldmeyer Sociological spectrum 37 (6), 371-389, 2017 | 23 | 2017 |
What journals are the most cited journals in criminology and criminal justice’s “big three” journals? RE Barranco, WG Jennings, DC May, MJ Wells Journal of Criminal Justice Education 27 (1), 19-34, 2016 | 23 | 2016 |
Violence at the box office: Considering ratings, ticket sales, and content of movies RE Barranco, NE Rader, A Smith Communication Research 44 (1), 77-95, 2017 | 21 | 2017 |
Do rural school resource officers contribute to net-widening? Evidence from a southern state DC May, R Barranco, R Ruddell, A Robertson Journal of Rural Social Sciences 31 (2), 5, 2016 | 16 | 2016 |
Latinos, Blacks, and the competition for low-skill jobs: Examining regional variations in the effect of immigration on homicide in the US RE Barranco Sociological Spectrum 34 (3), 185-202, 2014 | 13 | 2014 |
Reconsidering the unusual suspect: Immigration and the 1990s crime decline RE Barranco, ES Shihadeh, DA Evans Sociological Inquiry 88 (2), 344-369, 2018 | 9 | 2018 |
Religious contexts and violence in emerging and traditional immigrant destinations CT Harris, B Feldmeyer, R Barranco Religions 9 (4), 116, 2018 | 8 | 2018 |
Ticket sales and violent content in popular movies RE Barranco, NE Rader, MT Trinh Deviant Behavior 41 (8), 1005-1017, 2020 | 7 | 2020 |
The third alternative: Latino immigration from the United States to Canada, 1980 to 2009 F Trovato, RE Barranco Canadian Studies in Population [ARCHIVES] 40 (3-4), 218–234-218–234, 2013 | 5 | 2013 |