Offices are closed and classes will be held virtually.

picture of Dr. Patrick M. Seffrin

Dr. Patrick M. Seffrin

Associate Professor


seffrin@marywood.edu

School of the Humanities

570-348-6211 x2242

Immaculata Hall 209

Courses taught:

Shadow and Service CJ-101
Quantitative Reasoning CJ-202
Violence and Peace CJ-212
Crime in the Movies CJ-213
Criminology CJ-303
Race, Ethnicity and Criminal Justice CJ-326
Social Research CJ-351
The American Prison CJ-433
Patrick M. Seffrin, PhD.
Concentrations:
Criminology, criminal justice, sociology
Education:
Ph.D. Bowling Green State University

Patrick Seffrin is an associate professor in the Social Sciences Department at Marywood University. Dr. Seffrin earned his Ph.D. and M.A. in sociology from the Bowling Green State University before joining the Marywood faculty in 2009. He teaches courses in the areas of sociology, criminology, and criminal justice. Before entering graduate school, he was a supervisor in an Ohio juvenile residential center housing felony sex offender. He is certified as a Chemical Dependency Counselor in Ohio. His teaching and research interests include criminology, sociology, and research methods. Below is a link to a recent publication by Seffrin and colleagues which appears in the journal Partner Abuse. This research examined the relationship between intimate partner violence and sexual infidelity.

Seffrin, P. M., Ingulli, P., & Teeple, J. (2021). A biosocial perspective on the relationship of sexual infidelity to intimate partner violence focusing on socioeconomic factors, cohabiting unions, and children. Partner abuse, 12(1), 42-63
https://www.safetylit.org/citations/index.php?fuseaction=citations.viewdetails&citationIds[]=citjournalarticle_680892_20


See link to CV

https://docs.google.com/document/d/1qFkNPYtcu_IYM2iikBSOQm_W79anZ4_b/edit?usp=sharing&ouid=109515403304131494105&rtpof=true&sd=true

Presentations and Publications


Seffrin, P. M., Ingulli, P., & Teeple, J. (2021). A biosocial perspective on the relationship of sexual infidelity to intimate partner violence focusing on socioeconomic factors, cohabiting unions, and children. Partner abuse, 12(1), 42-63
https://www.safetylit.org/citations/index.php?fuseaction=citations.viewdetails&citationIds[]=citjournalarticle_680892_20