Research activities

Our Publications

Members of the Centre for Communities and Social Justice regularly produce books, monographs and other high-impact publications. Some examples are provided below.

Books:

  • Fanghanel, A. (2019). Disrupting Rape Culture: Public Space, Sexuality and Revolt. Bristol University Press.
  • Fanghanel, A., Milne, E., Zampini, G. F., Banwell, S., & Fiddler, M. (2020). Sex and Crime. Sage.
  • Tomlin J. & Völlm B. (2023). Diversity and Marginalisation in Forensic Mental Health Care. Routledge. London, UK
  • Vacchelli, E. (2018) Embodied Research in Migration Studies: Creative and Participatory Approaches. Policy Press Banwell, S. (2020). Gender and the Violence(s) of War and Armed Conflict: More dangerous to be a woman? Emerald Publishing Limited.
  • Banwell, S. (2023) The War Against Nonhuman Animals: A Non-Speciesist Understanding of Gendered Reproductive Violence, Palgrave McMillian
  • Banwell et al. The Emerald Handbook on Feminist Perspectives on Women’s Acts of Violence. Bingley: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • Lehtonen, A. (2023). The Sexual Logics of Neoliberalism in Britain: Sexual Politics in Exceptional Times. Taylor & Francis.
  • Petrillo, M. (2023). Women, Trauma, and Journeys towards Desistance: Navigating the Labyrinth. Routledge.

Latest Journal Articles and Book Chapters:

  • Acott, T.G., Willis, C., Ranger, S., Cumming, G., Richardson, P., O’Neil, R., Ford, A., 2022, Coastal transformations and connections: Revealing values through the community voice method, People and Nature, https://doi.org/10.1002/pan3.10371
  • Adkins, V. ‘The Warnock report and partial ectogestation: retracing the past to step into the future’ (2023) Medical Law Review https://doi.org/10.1093/medlaw/fwad008
  • Fanghanel, A (2022), ‘Not the Wild West: Femonationalism, gendered security regimes, and Brexit’, in Fileborn, B and Bows, H (eds.) (2022), Geographies of gender-based violence, Bristol University Press
  • Hockham D, Campbell J, Chambers A, Franklin P, Pollard I, Reynolds T & Ruddock S(2022) Let Our Legacy Continue: beginning an archival journey a creative essay of the digital co-creation and hybrid dissemination of Windrush Oral Histories at the University of Greenwich’s Stephen Lawrence Gallery, Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance, 27:2, 199-215
  • Kaspersson, M. (2023, in press) ‘Infanticide in Sweden: From Condemnation to (too Much?) Consideration’ in Brennan, K and Milne, E (eds) 100 Years of the Infanticide Act: Legacy, Impact and Future Directions. London. Hart, pp. 219-244.
  • Mann, S. (2021) Parklife: stories and spaces in lockdown. European Journal of Homelessness, 15 (2). pp. 219-236. (doi: https://doi.org/10.51428/tsr.muia6162)
  • Marziale, L and Reynolds, T (2023) Migrant Women resisting borders through participatory arts, in (ed) UK Borderscapes: Sites of enforcement and Resistance, Routledge, London.
  • Pepper, M. (2021) 'Theorising the police support volunteer experience in an English constabulary: A role identity perspective'. Policing and Society, https://doi.org/10.1080/10439463.2021.1999449
  • Petrillo, M. (2022). Women's desistance: A review of the literature through a gendered lens. In I. Masson and N. Booth (Eds). The Routledge Handbook of Women's Experiences of Criminal Justice. Routledge.
  • Riaz, A. (2023) ‘The Covid-19 Pandemic and the Case for the Abolition of Immigration Detention’, Journal of Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Law, 37(2), 150-165
  • Schreeche-Powell, E. (2023) “Review of Convict Criminology for the Future”, Journal of Criminology and Criminal Justice, SAGE.
  • Tomlin J. & Tonkin, M. (2022): The EssenCES Measure of Ward Atmosphere: Mokken Scaling, Confirmatory Factor Analysis, and Investigating Patient-Level Characteristics. International Journal of Forensic Mental Health. DOI: 10.1080/14999013.2022.2134946
  • Vacchelli, E. (2023) ‘Temporalities, Dependencies and the Politics of Marriage Migration’ in UK border: imaginaries, practices, experiences and resistance edited by Kahina Le Louvier and Karen Latricia Hough. London: Taylor and Francis (with Eleonore Kofman)

Recent Knowledge Exchange publications: