Conference Programme 2018
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Rethinking time in a changing world 1 Outstanding Achievement Award 2018 Professor Frances Heidensohn (London School of Economics) Professor Frances Heidensohn has made an outstanding contribution to both the discipline and to those who work within it. Her expansive body of work spans almost fifty years and is both national and international in reach, influence and impact. Her seminal paper in 1968, ‘The deviance of women’ a critique and an enquiry’, shone a critical light on the lack of investigation and the theoretical neglect of women’s deviance. In calling for a gendered sociology of knowledge, the growth in feminist criminological scholarship, changes to the criminological curriculum, journals and networks devoted to the study of gender, crime and social control that have emerged over the last five decades is extraordinary; and in all of these endeavours, Professor Heidensohn has played a key role in their initiation. In challenging the cultural and structural contexts of academia – and their relation to larger social and political institutions – her work has forced the academe to consider what we study, how and why we study them. Her work has since been taken up and addressed by feminist scholars and has inspired generations of feminist criminologists. Her body of work has also impacted on those scholars that do not identify as feminist but are still convinced by the inherent logic that gender is one of the most basic organizing structures within and across societies, and as such her work has broad import for our understanding of crime and social control. Her book Women and Crime (1985) firmly established her as a major criminological thinker and continues to be a key text for contemporary scholars and students of criminology. Building on her interest in women’s deviance, Professor Heidensohn’s work has over the last twenty-five years broadened out to consider international and comparative perspectives and the role of women in law enforcement. In doing so, again she critically challenged the frame of feminist criminology through extending its gaze, incorporating an analysis of women with power as criminal justice agents. In addition to her academic achievements and contributions, Professor Heidensohn has served for many years as a member of the Sentencing Advisory panel and was Commissioner for Judicial Appointments. She has also provided much support to colleagues, mentoring and supporting them over the course of their academic careers. Professor Frances Heidensohn is a pioneering scholar within criminology and her work continues to be cited and drawn upon by contemporary scholars in their analyses of the gendered nature of crime, harm, control and justice – her work remains as important today as it was fifty years ago. In 2004, Frances received the Sellin-Glueck Award from the American Society of Criminology in recognition of her international contributions to criminology. As a strong supporter and advocate of British Criminology over the course of her career, we hope that her achievements will be recognised and celebrated. 2 Postgraduate Conference Programme Tuesday, 3rd July 2018 TIME SESSION LOCATION Postgraduate Arrival and Registration Curzon Foyer 9:30-11:00 Refreshments C140b/d 11:00 – 11:30 Postgraduate Conference Welcome C192 11:30 – 12:30 Keynote – David Wilson C192 12:30 – 13:30 Postgraduate Lunch C087 Masterclasses 1. Geese Theatre: Arts and Criminal Justice – Andy C383 Watson 13:30 – 14:30 2. Preparing for VIVA – Simon Winlow and James C386 Treadwell 3. Meet the Editors and Getting Published – Bill Davies C388 and Stephanie Kewley 14:30 – 14:45 Break 14:45 – 15:45 Postgraduate Parallel Sessions Various rooms 15:45 – 16:45 Break Masterclasses 1. Applying for jobs - Emma Kelly and Simon Winlow C383 16:45 – 17:45 2. Dealing with the Media – Donal McIntyre, John C386 Simpson and David Howard 18:00 - Late Postgraduate Social Event Eagle and Ball 3 Postgraduate Conference Programme Wednesday 4th July 2018 TIME SESSION LOCATION 08:00 – 09:00 Refreshments C140b/d Registration Curzon Foyer 09:00 – 10:00 Keynote – Thomas Raymen C192 10:15 – 11:15 Postgraduate Parallel Sessions Various rooms 11:15 – 12:30 Lunch and close C087 Main Conference Programme Wednesday 4th July 2018 TIME SESSION LOCATION 10:00 – 12:30 Main conference registration Curzon Foyer 12:00-12:30 Refreshments C087 12:30 – 12:45 Main Conference Welcome C192 12:45 – 13:30 Keynote – Jeff Ferrell C192 13:45 – 15:00 Parallel Sessions Various rooms 15:00 – 15:15 Refreshments C140b/d 15:15 –15.45 HMP Grendon Panel – chaired by Professor Elizabeth Yardley C192 Arts and Rehabilitation Panel - chaired by Professor Elizabeth 15:45 – 16:15 C192 Yardley 16:15 – 17:30 Parallel Sessions 17:30 – 19:00 C140a/b/c/d Drinks Reception 4 Main Conference Programme Thursday 5th July 2018 TIME SESSION LOCATION Registration Curzon Foyer 07:30 – 09:00 Breakfast C140b/d 09:00 – 09:45 Keynotes – Mike Levi C192 09:45 – 11:00 Parallel Sessions Various rooms 11:00 – 11:15 Refreshments C140b/d 11:15 – 12:45 Keynotes – Ben Crewe and Yvonne Jewkes C192 12:45 – 13:45 Lunch (BSC AGM meeting) C087 13:45 – 15:00 Parallel Sessions Various rooms 15:00 – 15:45 Keynote – Edmund Clark C192 Refreshments C140b/d 15:45 – 16:15 Book launch – Emma Milner (Middlesex University), Nigel Room South (Essex University), BSC WCCJ Network and Palgrave 16:15 – 17:30 Parallel Sessions Various rooms 18:30 Coaches to leave from Curzon Outside Curzon Edgbaston 20:00 Conference dinner (Outstanding Achievement Award) Cricket Ground Main Conference Programme Friday 6th July 2018 TIME SESSION LOCATION 09:30 – 10:30 Registration Curzon foyer Refreshments C140b/d 10:30 – 11:45 Parallel Sessions Various rooms 11:45 – 13:00 Packed lunch and close C087 12:00 – 13:45 Network meetings Various rooms 5 Emeritus Professor David Wilson David Wilson's work concerns serious violent crime – especially murder and serial murder. Having worked with a number of British serial killers and on police investigations related to linked murders, David has used these experiences within his research and teaching, most notably within the Applied Criminology Module on the BA Criminology. He appears regularly in the print and broadcast media – most recently on Channel 4's 'Interview with a Murderer', ITV1’s 'Bring Back Borstal' and on Channel 5’s 'David Wilson’s Psychopaths'. In 2013 he was made a National Teaching Fellow; he was the Vice Chair of the Howard League for Penal Reform (1999-2014); he was also the Chair of the Friends of Grendon; and Vice President of New Bridge. Upon his retirement in April 2017, he was named an Emeritus Professor of Birmingham City University. 6 Doctor Thomas Raymen Dr Thomas Raymen is a Lecturer in Criminology in the School of Law, Criminology and Government at Plymouth University. Thomas is an early-career researcher who was awarded his PhD in 2017. His research interests focus upon the relationship between consumer capitalism, harm and commodified leisure. He is the co-founder of the deviant leisure research network and co-editor of the deviant leisure book series with Emerald publishers. Thomas has published a variety of articles and chapters on topics such as violence, gambling, crime prevention and urban space, leisure and harm, tourism and environmental harm, and dystopian fiction. His current research is dedicated to developing a theory for social harm rooted in a post- liberal ethics. He is the author of two forthcoming monographs: Parkour, Deviance and Leisure in the Late- Capitalist City: An Ethnography (2018) with Emerald, and Deviant Leisure and Social Harm (2019) with Policy Press and co-authored with Dr Oliver Smith. 7 Postgraduate Conference Parallel Sessions Tuesday, 3rd July 2018 14:45 – 15:45 TIME SESSION LOCATION Reflexivity, identity and crime Chair: Luke Hubbard, University of Surrey Understanding Anti-LGBT Hate Crime Luke Hubbard, University of Surrey Transforming Victim Engagement: Overcoming ethical, practical and Room A interactive constraints to facilitate participation of disability hate 383 crime victims David Wilkin, University of Leicester Starting Native: The problem of ignoring personal biography in methods Adam Scott, Liverpool John Moore University Domestic Violence: Narratives & lived experiences Chair: Natalie Christian, Liverpool John Moores University 'A Man's Home is His Castle. And Mine is a Cage': Pathways to Remedy, Recovery and Security for Economic Abuse in Victoria Madeleine Ulbrick, Monash University The Repercussions of Domestic Abuse and Women’s Experiences of Desistance Room B Natalie Christian, Liverpool John Moores University 385 Individual Differences and the Impact of Punitive Judgements for Eyewitness Testimony of Domestic Violence Emily Parrish, University of Huddersfield Linguistic Avoidance, Patriarchal Resistance and Image-Based Sexual Abuse: A Case of Semantic Misdirection Chrissy Thompson, The University of Melbourne Citizen & Economy Policing Chair: David Belsham, University of the Sunshine Coast Parents Partnering Police to Improve Traffic Law Adherence in Non- Room C compliant Novice Drivers in Sydney, Australia. 386 David Belsham, University of the Sunshine Coast Understanding and Explaining Change in Neighbourhood Policing 8 Jack Greig-Midlane, University of Bristol Exploring police interpretations and attitudes toward community crime control initiatives: the case of citizen patrols Sean Butcher, University of Leeds We lose all the good ones. I don't know where they go to, but we lose them all.: Familiarity and continuity in neighbourhood