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Natalie Rivera

Natalie  Rivera
  • PhD Student
  • School of Criminal Justice
  • MS 2024, Michigan State University
  • BA 2022, Iowa State University of Science and Technology

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Curriculum Vitae

ORCID


Biography

Natalie Rivera is a second-year dual-major doctoral student in the School of Criminal Justice and Chicano/Latino Studies at Michigan State University. She is a recipient of the Academic Achievement Graduate Assistantship (AAGA), Early Start Research Award, Hiram E. Fitzgerald fellow, and an Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research (ICPSR) diversity fellow and scholar. She received her BA in Psychology with two minors in Criminal Justice and US Latino/a Studies from Iowa State University. She received her MS in Criminal Justice with a graduate certification in Chicano/Latino Studies from Michigan State University.

Her research interests are victimology, gender-based violence, Chicano/Latino Studies, corrections, critical criminology, and mixed methods. Her master’s thesis, “Types of Abuse and Help-Seeking: A Comparative Study of Latina Women Differing in Ethnic Identification,” examined how Latina survivors navigate systemic barriers when seeking support.


Research Interests

  • Victimology
  • Gender-based violence
  • Chicano/Latino Studies
  • Corrections
  • Critical Criminology
  • Mixed methods

Selected Publications

Rivera, N., Sanders, K., & DeJong, C. (2025). The Case for Integrating Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion into Criminology and Criminal Justice Doctoral Programs. Journal of Criminal Justice Education.