CAHSS Alum Publishes Book Chapter, “Transforming the Systemic Humiliation of Crime and Justice: Reawakening Black Consciousness”
Tony Gaskew, Ph.D., graduate of the doctoral program in Conflict Analysis and Resolution in the Department of Conflict Resolution Studies (DCRS) in NSU’s College of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (CAHSS), has authored a chapter in the book, Systematic
Humiliation in America: Finding Dignity within Systems of Degradation, edited by Daniel Rothbart, Ph.D. and published by Palgrave McMillian. His chapter is entitled, “Transforming the Systemic Humiliation of Crime and Justice: Reawakening Black Consciousness.”
Gaskew is professor of Criminal Justice and Director, Criminal Justice Program at University of Pittsburg Bradford. He spent over 20 years in law enforcement. In 2016, he was one of ten US educators invited to the White House to participate in a Roundtable on Criminal Justice Reform.
Gaskew has published extensively in the areas of criminal justice, and policing. His book, Rethinking Prison Reentry: Transforming Humiliation into Humility, focuses on the role of the criminal justice system in providing adequate post-secondary prison education opportunities for incarcerated black males and the impact of historical racism on black males and on the criminal justice system.
Gaskew was a recipient of the 2014 NSU Distinguished Alumni Award. His honors include the Fulbright-Hays Fellow for a research project in Egypt and the Academic Fellow in Terrorist Studies in Israel by The Foundation for Defense of Democracies. He was named a University of Pittsburgh Faculty Diversity Fellow and Teacher of the Year by The National Society of Leadership and Success. Gaskew is the founding director of the nationally recognized UPB Prison Education Program.