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Tracy Andrus

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Name
  
Tracy Andrus


Tracy Andrus httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsee

Books
  
From Prisoner to PhD: The Life, Death, and Ressurection of an Ex-Convict

Education
  
University of Louisiana at Monroe, Prairie View A&M University

Tracy andrus foundation marshall


Tracy Andrus (born September 26, 1962) is a criminologist who is recognized for the development of two crime theories —"Enviroecogenetics" and "Broke Theory." He earned four college degrees and became the first African American in the United States to earn a Ph.D. in juvenile justice. After being sentenced to 57 years in prison for check kiting, Andrus spent only three years in the Louisiana and Texas Department of Corrections and was released in 1994. This started his interest in the criminal justice system. Andrus spends at least 20 weeks out of the year traveling abroad speaking to disadvantaged youth who are children of felons or have parents currently incarcerated in prison. Andrus is the Director of Criminal Justice at Wiley College in Marshall, Texas. Andrus received a grant from the Department of Homeland Security in 2010 and 2011 to study "Equal Protection of the law in the Era of Terrorism" and spent ten weeks in Seattle with two student researchers. Andrus received additional funding for $50,000 from DHS to continue his study in 2011. Andrus was awarded a grant from the Sam Taylor Foundation to track law enforcement killings in the United States in 2014.

Contents

Early life

Andrus is a native of Crowley, Louisiana, and is the twelfth child of Alice V. Andrus and Warren Lee Andrus. Andrus grew up during an era when America was undergoing significant change in its political, economic, and racial landscape. He was in the third grade when schools in Louisiana were integrated, and racial assimilation led to very different views among the liberals and conservatives of the time. He grew up in a home that was destroyed by fire when he was in kindergarten. He was active in sports throughout his early life, playing football, baseball and basketball. He was also active in academic clubs in junior high and high school.

Education

Andrus graduated from Crowley High School in 1981 with honors and attended Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana, US, where he graduated in 2000 with a degree in criminal justice. He later graduated from the University of Louisiana at Monroe in 2001 with a Masters Degree in criminal justice. On May 7, 2005, Andrus completed his doctorate at Prairie View A&M University became the first African American in the US to earn a Ph.D. in juvenile justice. Andrus developed the Enviroecogenetics Theory which focuses on environment, economics, and genetics as causes of crime. Andrus is also credited with developing the theory that people who do not have money or anything to lose are predisposed to a greater extent to engage in criminal activity. Andrus' broke theory proposes that people who are living in comfortable settings and earning decent incomes are less likely to engage in criminal activity. Andrus theory aligns with Edwin Sutherland's Differential Association Theory. Andrus also earned his prior learning assessment certificate and his Mastery Certificate from the University of Chicago and the Council On Adult and Experiential Learning. Andrus is also president and CEO of the Council on Higher Educational Solutions For Adults (CHESA).

Career

Andrus is credited with developing two evolving theories on crime—Enviroecogenetics and Broke Theory—and is the author of three books: Beneath the Skin of Black Folks, From Prisoner to Ph.D., and Why Are So Many Black Folks In Jail? Dr. Andrus is Director of Criminal Justice at Wiley College and President and CEO of the Council On Higher Education Solutions For Adults (CHESA). Dr. Andrus is also President and CEO of Tracy Andrus Foundation.

Andrus' Enviroecogenetics theory suggests that criminal activity can be explained by analyzing three dominant variables:

  • the environments in which individuals are raised,
  • the economic status of individuals and their families, and
  • the genetic makeup of individuals and their families.
  • Andrus suggests that individuals who are raised in low socioeconomic environments are predisposed to a greater extent to become engaged in criminal activity. According to Andrus, economics, specifically the lack of money, is the strongest predictor of an individual's likelihood to engage in criminal activity, whilst the reasons can be varied.

    Andrus was elected president of the Southwestern Association of Criminal Justice in 2008, and is an ordained minister and pastor of Edward Chapel MBC in Marshall, Texas. Andrus was elected vice chair of the Minority and Women Section of the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences which is the largest criminal justice conference.

    Published by Createspace, Why Are So Many Black Folks In Jail? was released in December 2011 and raises questions about the functions of incarceration in the United States. Andrus is an advocate for African Americans and felons in the US. Andrus is also the author of Beneath the Skin of Black Folks, From Prisoner to PhD and a Macro Analysis of Poverty and African American Incarceration. Andrus published his book "Ex Felon Survival Guide" 2013 and in 2015, "Customer Service - The Reason Some HBCU's are Destined to Fail.

    References

    Tracy Andrus Wikipedia