Publications & Presentations

Academic Publications

 

Public Presentations

  • November 2024: “Look Mom I’m on TV: Crowd-sourced policing, social media, and the prosecution of January 6 Capitol defendants,” The Hague Program on International Cyber Security, Conference on International Cyber Security, The Hague, Netherlands [Presented by Samantha Fagone]
  • October 2024: “Look Mom I’m on TV: Crowd-sourced policing, social media, and the prosecution of January 6 Capitol defendants,” Peace and Justice Studies Association, Niagara University, Niagara, New York
  • September 2024: Panel presentation at “Society for Terrorism Research” conference, University of Central Oklahoma, Edmond, Oklahoma
    • “The Prosecution Project in Practice: Investigating Jan 6 rioters through a decentralized, team-based, research cluster”, Michael Loadenthal
    • “How They Were Caught: Methods of identification of January 6th riot defendants”, Bella Tuffias-Mora,
    • “Digital Footprints: The Role of Technology in the January 6 Attack”, Samantha Fagone
    • “Defiance on Display: Analyzing the Brazenness of the January 6th Capital Riot Defendants”, Sarah Spurrier
    • “In the Public Eye: How the Public and Social Media Prevailed in Identifying Defendants”, Cameron Tiefenthaler
  • June 2024: Panel presentation at “Terrorism and Social Media” conference, Swansea University, Wales, UK
    • Look Mom I’m On TV: Crowd-sourced policing, social media, and the prosecution of  January 6 Capitol defendants”
  • September 2023: “Exploring the Prosecution Project: a student-led, decentralized network studying  political violence”, Peace and Justice Studies Association: ‘Building Positive Peace’,  Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa
  • March 2020: Panel presentation at “Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality Symposium”, sponsored by the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program, Miami University.
    • Michael Loadenthal, “The Prosecution Project: Methods, concepts, and future directions
    • Katie Blowers, “Trial by Plea Bargain
    • Sarah Moore, “What’s in a Name: The construction of eco-terrorism and legal repercussions of the AEPA/AETA, 1990 – 2019
    • Megan Burtis, “Friend or Foe?: Sentencing in the Prosecution of Terrorism”
  • March 2020: Public Critique of tPP Design and Method by Member of FBI’s Joint Terrorism Taskforce. [Department of Sociology, Miami University, UPH 351]
  • February 2019: Panel presentation at “Race, Class, Gender and Sexuality Symposium”, sponsored by the Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program, Miami University.
    • Athena Chapekis and Sarah M. Moore, “The prosecution of ‘others’:” Presidential rhetoric and the interrelation of framing, prosecutions, and the Global War on Terror?
    • Alexandria Doty, “The Effects of. Gender on Sentencing Within Terrorism Prosecution: Are Women Sentenced to a Significantly Different Prison Sentence than Men when they are Charged with Similar Acts of Terrorism?”
    • Hannah Hendricks, “Othered Status: The Death Penalty and White Supremacist Rhetoric”
    • Michael Loadenthal, “Studying Political Violence While Indicted: Against Objectivity and Detachment”
  • February 2019: Sharing the Tools and Approach of the Prosecution Project as Applied Sociological Research [SOC462: Applied Sociological Research]
  • February 2019: Exploring Descriptive and Inferential Statistical Analysis using tPP [SOC462: Applied Sociological Research]
  • January 2019: Exploring Race and Ethnicity with tPP, Antioch College Department of Anthropology. [ANTH 270: Anthropology of Social Movements]
  • October 2018: tPP and the World of Undergraduate Research. [PSY112: Foundational Experiences in Psychology]
  • October 2018: Office of Research for Undergraduates panel discussion, featuring Dr. Naaborle Sackeyfio and the Prosecution Project, “Perspectives from Miami Social Science Undergraduate Researchers.” Sponsored by SOURCE [King Library AIS]
  • April 2018: Public Critique of tPP Design and Method by Member of FBI’s Joint Terrorism Taskforce. [Department of Sociology, Miami University, UPH 258]