
Criminogenic Resistance Theory (C.RT), developed by Dr. Green, reframes the way scholars, educators, and policymakers understand resilience within high-risk environments. Rather than asking why boys fail, it examines how they resist.
The theory explores how identity, community, and purpose operate as internal systems of protection against structuralized violence. By merging insights from criminology, psychology, and systems design, C.RT illuminates how human potential survives and thrives even within environments of constraint. It offers a developmental roadmap for helping individuals and institutions replace reaction with resilience, and punishment with purpose.
Justice is not simply a matter of enforcement; it’s a matter of design. Dr. Green’s work reveals how outdated systems legal, educational, and economic can unintentionally recycle harm across generations.
He partners with policymakers, foundations, and institutions to build reform strategies grounded in behavioral science, organizational leadership, and social equity . His approach prioritizes prevention and reintegration over punishment, helping decision-makers modernize justice infrastructures to reflect the principles of human development and collective stability.


Dr. Green’s reentry research centers on those who defy the odds men who not only reintegrate after incarceration but also rebuild their lives with meaning and direction. By mapping the shared psychological, social, and environmental factors among these success stories, he identifies the conditions that make transformation sustainable: belonging, purpose, accountability, and structured autonomy.
These findings have informed new models of reentry programming that move beyond compliance, empowering participants to become contributors restoring their sense of identity, community, and value in the process.
Violence doesn’t begin at the point of conflict it begins at the point of exclusion. Dr. Green’s research explores how social policy, economics, and culture intersect to create the conditions for harm long before a crime occurs.
Through data, narrative, and systems thinking, he exposes how inequity becomes embedded in institutions and provides frameworks for leaders to repair these fractures. The result is not only safer communities but a renewed belief in fairness, dignity, and shared responsibility.



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