Amber Krushas (Criminal Justice) published an article, "Advancing the Study of Adverse Childhood Experiences: An Examination of Measurement and Latent Classes," in Justice Quarterly. This study examined the measurement of 10 ACE subscales among a sample of 993 young, non-college educated women. Then, latent class analysis was used to estimate and predict ACE profiles that were used as correlates for understanding risk of stalking and sexual harassment victimization for White, Black, and Hispanic women. Measurement invariance tests supported the psychometric equivalence of the ACEs construct across race/ethnicity. While a four-class solution was identified as being the best fit, different ACE profiles were important correlates for victimization outcomes by race/ethnicity.