Skip to main content

Research Repository

Advanced Search

All Outputs (795)

Designing 'Healthy' Prisons for Women: Incorporating Trauma-Informed Care and Practice (TICP) into Prison Planning and Design (2019)
Journal Article
Jewkes, Y., Jordan, M., Wright, S., & Bendelow, G. (2019). Designing 'Healthy' Prisons for Women: Incorporating Trauma-Informed Care and Practice (TICP) into Prison Planning and Design. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(20), https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16203818

There has been growing acknowledgment among scholars, prison staff and policy-makers that gender-informed thinking should feed into penal policy but must be implemented holistically if gains are to be made in reducing trauma, saving lives, ensuring e... Read More about Designing 'Healthy' Prisons for Women: Incorporating Trauma-Informed Care and Practice (TICP) into Prison Planning and Design.

‘Delete the family’: platform families and the colonisation of the smart home (2019)
Journal Article
Goulden, M. (2019). ‘Delete the family’: platform families and the colonisation of the smart home. Information, Communication and Society, 24(7), 903-920. https://doi.org/10.1080/1369118x.2019.1668454

On its surface, the ‘smart home’ marks an effort to augment everyday domestic life to the benefit of its members, through the pervasive digital technologies of the Internet of Things (IoT). Through an analysis of the family-imitating group accounts o... Read More about ‘Delete the family’: platform families and the colonisation of the smart home.

Introducing the Slave Next Door (2019)
Journal Article
Birks, J., & Gardner, A. (2019). Introducing the Slave Next Door. Anti-Trafficking Review, 2019(13), 66-81. https://doi.org/10.14197/atr.201219135

Past studies have indicated that the British public consider human trafficking to be remote from their personal experiences. However, an increase in local press reporting, alongside the emergence of locally co-ordinated anti-modern slavery campaigns,... Read More about Introducing the Slave Next Door.

The Criminal Justice Voluntary Sector: Concepts and an Agenda for an Emerging Field (2019)
Journal Article
Tomczak, P. (2019). The Criminal Justice Voluntary Sector: Concepts and an Agenda for an Emerging Field. Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, 58(3), 276-297. https://doi.org/10.1111/hojo.12326

Volunteers and voluntary organisations play significant roles pervading criminal justice. They are key actors, with unrecognised potential to shore up criminal justice and/or collaboratively reshape social justice. Unlike public and for-profit agents... Read More about The Criminal Justice Voluntary Sector: Concepts and an Agenda for an Emerging Field.

Animal Research, Accountability, Openness and Public Engagement: Report from an International Expert Forum (2019)
Journal Article
Ormandy, E. H., Weary, D. M., Cvek, K., Fisher, M., Herrmann, K., Hobson-West, P., …von Keyserlingk, M. A. (2019). Animal Research, Accountability, Openness and Public Engagement: Report from an International Expert Forum. Animals, 9(9), 1-12. https://doi.org/10.3390/ani9090622

In November 2013, a group of international experts in animal research policy (n = 11) gathered in Vancouver, Canada, to discuss openness and accountability in animal research. The primary objective was to bring together participants from various juri... Read More about Animal Research, Accountability, Openness and Public Engagement: Report from an International Expert Forum.

Solid Foundations? Towards a Historical Sociology of Prison Building Programmes in England and Wales, 1959–2015 (2019)
Journal Article
Guiney, T. (2019). Solid Foundations? Towards a Historical Sociology of Prison Building Programmes in England and Wales, 1959–2015. Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, 58(4), 459-476. https://doi.org/10.1111/hojo.12334

Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in England and Wales. Drawing upon detailed archival research, this article offers a historical sociology of prison building programmes. It traces the evolutio... Read More about Solid Foundations? Towards a Historical Sociology of Prison Building Programmes in England and Wales, 1959–2015.

Inside the penal voluntary sector: Divided discourses of “helping” criminalized women (2019)
Journal Article
Quinn, K. (2019). Inside the penal voluntary sector: Divided discourses of “helping” criminalized women. Punishment and Society, https://doi.org/10.1177/1462474519863461

Neoliberal austerity measures and welfare state retrenchment have meant that voluntary organizations around the globe are increasingly called upon to perform statutory social services. Despite a large and rising presence in criminal justice service d... Read More about Inside the penal voluntary sector: Divided discourses of “helping” criminalized women.

The presentation of the networked self: Ethics and epistemology in social network analysis (2019)
Journal Article
D’Angelo, A., & Ryan, L. (2021). The presentation of the networked self: Ethics and epistemology in social network analysis. Social Networks, 67, 20-28. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socnet.2019.06.002

Drawing on the seminal work of Goffman, Krackhardt and others, this paper argues that there is a crucial step in between participants’ perceptions and the collection and visualisation of data – i.e. what we call the presentation of the networked self... Read More about The presentation of the networked self: Ethics and epistemology in social network analysis.

Raymond Williams and the politics of the Commons: the performative quality of the intellectual (2019)
Journal Article
Stevenson, N. (2019). Raymond Williams and the politics of the Commons: the performative quality of the intellectual. International Journal of Cultural Studies, 22(5), 691-705. https://doi.org/10.1177/1367877919849958

Much of the sociological work on intellectuals is mostly concerned with the structural role they play within society. In this respect, Raymond Williams is best understood in Gramscian (1988) terms as an organic intellectual connected to the labour mo... Read More about Raymond Williams and the politics of the Commons: the performative quality of the intellectual.

The Opportunities and Challenges of Using Photo-Elicitation in Child-Centered Constructivist Grounded Theory Research (2019)
Journal Article
Poku, B. A., Caress, A. L., & Kirk, S. (2019). The Opportunities and Challenges of Using Photo-Elicitation in Child-Centered Constructivist Grounded Theory Research. International Journal of Qualitative Methods, 18, 1-7. https://doi.org/10.1177/1609406919851627

In the last three decades, there has been a growing interest in listening to children’s voices in child health research. Ensuring an appropriate level of dialogical engagement with children calls for participatory methods. Auto-driven photo-elicitati... Read More about The Opportunities and Challenges of Using Photo-Elicitation in Child-Centered Constructivist Grounded Theory Research.

The terminology of identities between, outside and beyond the gender binary – A systematic review (2019)
Journal Article
Thorne, N., Yip, A. K., Bouman, W. P., Marshall, E., & Arcelus, J. (2019). The terminology of identities between, outside and beyond the gender binary – A systematic review. International Journal of Transgenderism, 20(2-3), 138-154. https://doi.org/10.1080/15532739.2019.1640654

Background: Recently, a multitude of terms have emerged, especially within North America and Western Europe, which describe identities that are not experienced within the culturally accepted binary structure of gender which prevails within those cult... Read More about The terminology of identities between, outside and beyond the gender binary – A systematic review.

Reducing repeat paediatric emergency department attendance for non-urgent care: a systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions (2019)
Journal Article
Poku, B. A., & Hemingway, P. (2019). Reducing repeat paediatric emergency department attendance for non-urgent care: a systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions. Emergency Medicine Journal, 36(7), 435-442. https://doi.org/10.1136/emermed-2018-207536

Objective Non-urgent paediatric ED (PED) visits appear to contribute a large portion to the growing use of EDs globally. Several interventions have tried to curb repeated non-urgent attendances, but no systematic review of their effectiveness exists.... Read More about Reducing repeat paediatric emergency department attendance for non-urgent care: a systematic review of the effectiveness of interventions.

Alternative approaches to criminal records : how can we achieve justice as fairness? (2019)
Book Chapter
HENLEY, A. (2019). Alternative approaches to criminal records : how can we achieve justice as fairness?. In P. Carlen, & L. A. França (Eds.), Justice Alternatives. Taylor & Francis. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429468179

This chapter seeks to critically examine current approaches to criminal records and their disclosure outside of criminal justice processes. In particular, it questions the rationalities underpinning disclosure practices where the rights of people wi... Read More about Alternative approaches to criminal records : how can we achieve justice as fairness?.

Theorising disability: a practical and representative ontology of learning disability (2019)
Journal Article
Cluely, V., Fyson, R., & Pilnick, A. (2019). Theorising disability: a practical and representative ontology of learning disability. Disability and Society, 35(2), 235-257. https://doi.org/10.1080/09687599.2019.1632692

This article contributes to the ongoing development of the theorisation of learning disability, focusing on the value of the ontological turn. We argue that while social theory has influenced understandings of disability within academia, particularly... Read More about Theorising disability: a practical and representative ontology of learning disability.

The gendering of heterosexual religious young adults’ imagined futures (2019)
Journal Article
Page, S., & Yip, A. K. (2019). The gendering of heterosexual religious young adults’ imagined futures. Journal of Contemporary Religion, 34(2), 253-273. https://doi.org/10.1080/13537903.2019.1621542

This article draws from a mixed-method project that examined religion, youth, gender, and sexuality among young women and men aged between 18 and 25, from seven religious traditions, and living in the UK. It charts how unmarried heterosexuals imagine... Read More about The gendering of heterosexual religious young adults’ imagined futures.

‘Typical scripts’ and their silences: exploring myths about sexual violence and LGBTQ people from the perspectives of support workers (2019)
Journal Article
Mortimer, S., Powell, A., & Sandy, L. (2019). ‘Typical scripts’ and their silences: exploring myths about sexual violence and LGBTQ people from the perspectives of support workers. Current Issues in Criminal Justice, 31(3), 333-348. https://doi.org/10.1080/10345329.2019.1639287

Sexism, heterosexism and cissexism shape what is visible and knowable about sexual violence for LGBTQ people. While there is a plethora of research into ‘rape myths’ as they pertain to cisgender women’s experiences of sexual violence perpetrated by c... Read More about ‘Typical scripts’ and their silences: exploring myths about sexual violence and LGBTQ people from the perspectives of support workers.

Power, politics and the police: lessons from Marikana (2019)
Journal Article
Dixon, B. (2019). Power, politics and the police: lessons from Marikana. Journal of Modern African Studies, 57(2), 203-221. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0022278X19000053

This article examines the relationship between politicians and the police in the days before the shooting by members of the South African Police Service of 34 striking mineworkers at the Marikana platinum mine in South Africa on 16 August 2012. Drawi... Read More about Power, politics and the police: lessons from Marikana.

The albatross of juvenile criminal records (2019)
Book Chapter
Carr, N. (2019). The albatross of juvenile criminal records. In S. Meijer, H. Annison, & A. O'Loughlin (Eds.), Fundamental rights and legal consequences of criminal conviction. London: Hart Publishing