
John is a PhD candidate in the School of Criminal Justice at Michigan State University. He is currently employed as a Research Analyst for the Supreme Court Administrative Office of the State of Michigan. His research focuses primarily on court administration, public perception of the courts, procedural justice, sentencing, and trust in the courts. He is an active member of the TRUSST Research Lab at Michigan State University. His research has been previously published in journals such as Justic
Read moreMA 2019, Boise State University
BA 2016, Weber State University
BS 2016, Weber State University
Comfort with and willingness to participate in COVID-19 contact tracing: The role of risk perceptions, trust, and political ideology Authors: Van Fossen, J.A., Ropp, J.W., Darcy, K., & Hamm, J. Year: 2022 Journal: Social Science & Medicine
Satisfaction, legitimacy, and guilty pleas: How perceptions and attorneys affect defendant decision-making Authors: Lee, J.G., Jaynes, C.M., & Ropp, J. Year: 2021 Journal: Justice Quarterly
“Sometimes I'm Just Wearing the Prosecutor Down”: An Exploratory Analysis of Criminal Defense Attorneys in Plea Negotiations and Client Counseling Authors: Lee, J.G. & Ropp, J. Year: 2020 Publisher: Journal of Qualitative Criminal Justice & Criminology