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Outputs (60)

This is how it Feels: Activating Lived Experience in the Penal Voluntary Sector (2021)
Journal Article
Buck, G., Tomczak, P., & Quinn, K. (2022). This is how it Feels: Activating Lived Experience in the Penal Voluntary Sector. British Journal of Criminology, 62(4), 822-839. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azab102

Increasing calls for 'nothing about us without us' envision marginalised people as valuable and necessary contributors to policies and practices affecting them. In this paper, we examine what this type of inclusion feels like for criminalised people... Read More about This is how it Feels: Activating Lived Experience in the Penal Voluntary Sector.

(Not) Knowing and (Not) Caring About Animal Research: An Analysis of Writing From the Mass Observation Project (2021)
Journal Article
McGlacken, R. (2022). (Not) Knowing and (Not) Caring About Animal Research: An Analysis of Writing From the Mass Observation Project. Science & Technology Studies, 35(3), https://doi.org/10.23987/sts.102496

Animal research remains a practice marked by controversy and moral dilemma. However, UK science-society dialogues on the issue are increasingly managed via one-way transmissions of information which construct publics as passive and attribute their co... Read More about (Not) Knowing and (Not) Caring About Animal Research: An Analysis of Writing From the Mass Observation Project.

A victim-centred cost–benefit analysis of a stalking prevention programme (2021)
Journal Article
Tompson, L., Belur, J., & Jerath, K. (2021). A victim-centred cost–benefit analysis of a stalking prevention programme. Crime Science, 10(1), Article 21. https://doi.org/10.1186/s40163-021-00158-5

Research suggests that stalking inflicts great psychological and financial costs on victims. Yet costs of victimisation are notoriously difficult to estimate and include as intangible costs in cost–benefit analysis. This study reports an innovative c... Read More about A victim-centred cost–benefit analysis of a stalking prevention programme.

The cardboard box study: understanding collaborative data management in the connected home (2021)
Journal Article
Kilic, D., Crabtree, A., McGarry, G., & Goulden, M. (2022). The cardboard box study: understanding collaborative data management in the connected home. Personal and Ubiquitous Computing, 26(1), 155-176. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00779-021-01655-9

The home is a site marked by the increasing collection and use of personal data, whether online or from connected devices. This trend is accompanied by new data protection regulation and the development of privacy enhancing technologies (PETs) that s... Read More about The cardboard box study: understanding collaborative data management in the connected home.

Inpatient Institutional Care: The Forced Social Environment (2021)
Journal Article
Joyes, E. C., Jordan, M., Winship, G., & Crawford, P. (2021). Inpatient Institutional Care: The Forced Social Environment. Frontiers in Psychology, 12, Article 690384. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2021.690384

The landscape of mental health recovery is changing; there have been calls for a shift from the clinical expertise being the dominant voice within mental healthcare towards a more personalised and collaborative service that supports those in need of... Read More about Inpatient Institutional Care: The Forced Social Environment.

Becoming frail: A more than human exploration (2021)
Journal Article
Cluley, V., Fox, N., & Radnor, Z. (2021). Becoming frail: A more than human exploration. Health: An Interdisciplinary Journal for the Social Study of Health, Illness and Medicine, https://doi.org/10.1177/13634593211038460

‘Frailty’ is increasingly used as a clinical term to refer and respond to a particular bodily presentation, with numerous scores and measures to support its clinical determination. While these tools are typically quantitative in nature and based prim... Read More about Becoming frail: A more than human exploration.

Public Adoption of and Trust in the NHS COVID-19 Contact Tracing App in the United Kingdom: Quantitative Online Survey Study (2021)
Journal Article
Dowthwaite, L., Fischer, J., Perez Vallejos, E., Portillo, V., Nichele, E., Goulden, M., & McAuley, D. (2021). Public Adoption of and Trust in the NHS COVID-19 Contact Tracing App in the United Kingdom: Quantitative Online Survey Study. Journal of Medical Internet Research, 23(9), Article e29085. https://doi.org/10.2196/29085

Background: Digital contact tracing is employed to monitor and manage the spread of Covid-19. However, to be effective the system must be adopted by a substantial proportion of the population. Studies of (mostly hypothetical) contact tracing apps sho... Read More about Public Adoption of and Trust in the NHS COVID-19 Contact Tracing App in the United Kingdom: Quantitative Online Survey Study.

Supervision in child protection: a space and place for reflection or an excruciating marathon of compliance? (2021)
Journal Article
Beddoe, L., Ferguson, H., Warwick, L., Disney, T., Leigh, J., & Cooner, T. S. (2022). Supervision in child protection: a space and place for reflection or an excruciating marathon of compliance?. European Journal of Social Work, 25(3), 525-537. https://doi.org/10.1080/13691457.2021.1964443

Supervision is promoted as an essential element of effective professional practice in social work. Its benefits include promoting reflective social work and assisting with the management of the emotions generated in challenging practice. This article... Read More about Supervision in child protection: a space and place for reflection or an excruciating marathon of compliance?.