Andrea "Amy" Martinez, Ph.D.

Andrea Martinez, Ph.D.Assistant Professor

 

 

 

 

Contact Information:

Email: amy.martinez@sjsu.edu
Phone: 408-924-7045
Office: HB 211

Spring 2025 office hours:  TBA

 

About Dr. Martinez:

Dr. Amy Andrea Martinez earned her doctoral degree in Criminal Justice from the Criminal Justice Studies Department at John Jay College of Criminal Justice at the City University of New York. Her research interests include Mexican/Chicano Gang Culture, Mass Incarceration, Third World & Indigenous Qualitative Research Methods, U.S. (Settler) Colonialism, Police Use of Lethal Force, and Prison/Police Abolition. As a first-generation, working-class, and system impacted Xicana from Southern California, her experiences inform her commitment to decolonial gang research on Mexican/Chicanx families and their associations and experiences with gang and street life.

Areas of Interests:

  • Mexican/Chicano Gang Culture
  • Juvenile/Criminal Legal Systems
  • Punishment
  • Urban Ethnography
  • Police Use of Lethal Force
  • Prison & Police Abolition
  • Third World & Indigenous Qualitative Research Methods
  • U.S. (Settler) Colonialism

Recent Publications:

Martinez, A., A. and Flores, H.. (2022). 鈥淐hicana/o/x Abolitionist Genealogies Uncovered to Advance the Theory and Praxis of Police Abolition in the United States.鈥 In Routledge Transforming the Institution: Can We Achieve Justice and Legitimacy in Policing?. Routledge.

Martinez, A., A. (Forthcoming). 鈥淭erca Pero No Pendeja.鈥 In Rebecca Martinez and Monica Casper, ed., 鈥淲ho Belongs? Institutional Betrayal in Higher Education鈥 in the Feminist Wire Books.

Amy A. Martinez (Forthcoming). From El Bandido to Homeboy: Using a decolonial twist to reexamine and redefine 鈥榞angs鈥 and 鈥榞ang members.鈥 In J. Ortiz & S. Wilson (Eds.). Critical & Intersectional Gang Studies.: New York, NY: Routledge.

Amy A. Martinez (Forthcoming). Police Shooting of Bryan Carre帽o. In Michael J. Pfeifer, ed., History of American Racial Violence: An Encyclopedia of Conflicts, Riots, and Revolution (Goleta, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2022).

Martinez, A. A. (2019) 鈥淭he city got my back so the city on my back鈥: Prisoner鈥檚 negation of the states鈥 claims of prisoner鈥檚 humanity. In Routledge International Handbook of Critical Gang Studies (pp. 537-555). Routledge.

Martinez, A. A. (2019). The Gang Paradox: Inequalities and Miracles on the US-Mexico Border. Social Justice, 46(4), 131-137.