Main Conference Programme Outline

Wednesday 1st July

08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments 11:00 – 12:30 Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration 12:30 – 13:15 Buffet Lunch 13:15 – 14:30 Main Conference Welcome & Plenary: New Directions in Criminology 14:30 – 15:00 Refreshments and Ice Cream Reception Sponsored by ACJS 15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session A 16:45 – 18:15 Main Conference Parallel Session B 18:15 – 19:15 Main Conference Drinks Reception: Sponsored by Sage 19:15 onwards Main Conference 1st Night Meal & Social

Thursday 2nd July

08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Parallel Session C 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments 11:00 – 12:30 Main Conference Parallel Session D 12:30 – 13:15 Buffet Lunch and BSC AGM 13:15 – 14:30 Main Conference Plenary: Re-discovering Restorative Justice 14:30 – 15:00 Refreshments 15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session E 16:30 – 17:30 Network Meetings / Publisher Meetings 17:30 – 18:30 Conference Dinner Drinks Reception 18:45 – 19:30 Conference Dinner Pre Dinner Speaker 19:30 onwards Conference Dinner

Friday 3rd July

08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Parallel Session F 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments 11:00 – 12:30 Main Conference Plenary: Immigration Detention: Confinement in a Global World Closing Address 12:30 – 13:15 Packed Lunch 13:15 onwards End of Main Conference

Main Conference Programme Summary

Wednesday 1st July 2015 Roland Levinsky Building (RLB) / Smeaton Building (SMB)

Time Session Location 08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration RLB Ground Floor 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments RLB Ground Floor 11:00 – 12:30 Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration RLB Ground Floor 12:30 – 13:15 Buffet Lunch RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Welcome & Plenary: New Directions in Criminology

Professor Elliott P Currie Professor of Criminology, Law and Society 13:15 – 14:30 RLB Lecture Theatre 1 University of California

Professor Rowland Atkinson Research Chair in Inclusive Society University of Sheffield

14:30 – 15:00 Refreshments and Ice Cream Reception Sponsored by ACJS RLB Ground Floor 15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session A RLB / SMB 16:45 – 18:15 Main Conference Parallel Session B RLB / SMB 18:15 – 19:15 Main Conference Drinks Reception: Sponsored by Sage RLB Ground Floor 19:15 onwards Main Conference 1st Night Meal & Social UPSU

Thursday 2nd July 2015 Roland Levinsky Building (RLB) / Smeaton Building (SMB)

Time Session Location 08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Parallel Session C RLB / SMB 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments RLB Ground Floor 11:00 – 12:30 Main Conference Parallel Session D RLB / SMB 12:30 – 13:15 Buffet Lunch RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Plenary: Re-discovering Restorative Justice

Professor Kathleen Daly Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice 13:15 – 14:30 Griffith University RLB Lecture Theatre 1

Professor Kieran McEvoy Professor of Law and Transitional Justice Queens University Belfast

14:30 – 15:00 Refreshments and Cream Tea RLB Ground Floor 15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session E RLB / SMB 16:30 – 17:30 Network Meetings / Publisher Meetings RLB 206/207/208 Holiday Inn, Penthouse 17:30 – 18:30 Conference Dinner Drinks Reception Restaurant Conference Dinner Pre Dinner Speaker: Steve Duncan, Performance Holiday Inn, Mariners 18:45 – 19:30 Poet Suite Holiday Inn, Mariners 19:30 onwards Conference Dinner Suite

Friday 3rd July 2015 Roland Levinsky Building (RLB) / Smeaton Building (SMB)

Time Session Location 08:30 – 09:00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor 09:00 – 10:30 Main Conference Parallel Session F RLB / SMB 10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Plenary: Immigration Detention: Confinement in a Global World

Professor Mary Bosworth Assistant Director Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford

Professor Sharon Pickering 11:00 – 12:30 RLB Lecture Theatre 2 Professor of Criminology Monash University

Professor Ben Bowling Deputy Dean Kings College London

Closing Address: Dr Daniel Gilling, Plymouth University

12:30 – 13:15 Packed Lunch RLB Ground Floor 13:15 onwards End of Main Conference

Main Conference Parallel Session Summary

Wednesday 1st July 2015

Parallel Session A 15.00 – 16.30

Session Title Location A1 Feminist Criminology RLB 206 A2 Historical Perspectives on Crime and Justice RLB 207 A3 Theorising Criminology RLB 208 A4 Young Offenders RLB 209 A5 Cultures of Drug Use RLB 210 A6 Visual Criminology: Theory and Method RLB 303 A7 Learning as a Pathway to Desistance RLB 304 A8 International Issues in Procedural Justice SMB 200 Gender-based violence in student communities/among young A9 SMB 201 people: experience and perceptions A10 Examining Dissent SMB 202 A11 International Issues in Policing SMB 203 A12 Crime Prevention SMB 205

Parallel Session B 16.45 – 18.15

Session Title Location B1 Media and Criminal Justice RLB 206 B2 Contextualising Drug Use RLB 207 B3 Violent Crime RLB 208 B4 Working with Young Offenders RLB 209 B5 Governance and Crime RLB 210 B6 Serious Crime in Prison RLB 303 Gender-based violence in student communities/among young B7 RLB 304 people: challenges and interventions B8 Privatising Criminal Justice SMB 200 B9 Critical and Convict Perspectives on Prisons and Penality SMB 201 B10 Adventures in Ultra Realism SMB 202 B11 Police Identity and Culture SMB 203 B12 Criminological Methodology 1: Field Dilemmas SMB 205 B13 Prosopography and Criminology: Fellow travellers on A Research SMB 212 Voyage?

Thursday 2nd July 2015

Parallel Session C 09.00 – 10.30

Session Title Location C1 Cyber Crime RLB 206 C2 Probation: Exploring Practitioner and Offender Perspectives RLB 207 C3 Examining Domestic Violence RLB 208 C4 Examining Youth Justice RLB 209 C5 Examining Prison Systems RLB 303 C6 Children of Prisoners: International Perspectives RLB 304 C7 Green Criminology 1 SMB 200 C8 Criminological Methodology 2: Reflexivity SMB 201 C9 Technology in Policing SMB 202 C10 Gangs: categorizing, identifying and controlling SMB 203 C11 Vulnerable Victims SMB 205 C12 Controlling Drugs SMB 212 C13 Restorative Justice SMB 312

Parallel Session D 11:00 – 12:30

Session Title Location D1 Criminalising Youth SMB 102A D2 Locating Drug Use SMB 102B D3 Policing and Restorative Justice RLB 208 D4 State interests in cyber security: language, policies and action RLB 209 D5 Procedural Justice RLB 210 D6 Theorising Security and Punishment RLB 303 D7 Prisoners' families: New Perspectives RLB 304 D8 Examining Victimhood SMB 200 D9 Hate Crime SMB 201 D10 Calling the police? Responses to domestic violence SMB 202 D11 Theorising Policing SMB 203 D12 Changing Probation SMB 205 D13 Countering Terrorism SMB 212

Parallel Session E 15.00 – 16.30

Session Title Location E1 Delivering Youth Justice RLB 206 Women in academic criminology: opportunities, challenges and E2 success. A Women, Crime and Criminal Justice Network RLB 207 Roundtable E3 Visiting Prisons RLB 208 E4 Policing Vulnerable Victims RLB 209 E5 Redefining Victims RLB 210 E6 Unpacking Imprisonment RLB 303 E7 Locating The Border Through Law And Practice RLB 304 E8 On the Edge of Criminality SMB 201 E9 Courts and Court Processes SMB 202 Vegetables and Leopards: conceptualising growth and change in E10 SMB 203 desistance and recovery identities Reassessing Hate Crime: Key Findings from Recent Research E11 SMB 205 Projects E12 Penality and Punishment SMB 212 E13 Innovations in Restorative Justice SMB 312

Friday 3rd July 2015

Parallel Session F 09.00 – 10.30

Session Title Location F1 Border Control Issues RLB 206 F2 Assessing Impact: Technology to prevent and respond to crime RLB 208 F3 Constructions of Crime RLB 209 F4 Current Challenges Facing Youth Justice Roundtable RLB 210 F5 Challenging Legitimacy RLB 303 F6 Gender and Risk RLB 304 F7 Structures of Deception SMB 200 F8 Criminological Methodology 3: Innovation SMB 201

Main Conference Poster Summary

All posters will be displayed throughout the conference in The Commons, RLB Ground Floor

Poster No. Title Author Harnessing Digital Literacy: Increasing Student Engagement with Sarah Watson, BSC1 Socrative Coventry University Doing More for Less in Changing Times: The Use of Volunteers in Melissa Pepper, BSC2 Policing University of Surrey How do partner violence primary prevention campaigns challenge men Stephen Burrell, BSC3 and masculinities?

Main Conference Full Programme

Wednesday 1st July 2015

08.30 – 09.00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration 09.00 – 10.30 Collect your Conference Delegate Pack, meet the Plymouth Team and RLB Ground Floor explore the programme

10.30 – 11.00 Refreshments & Pastries RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Delegates Arrival & Registration 11.00 – 12.30 Collect your Conference Delegate Pack, meet the Plymouth Team and RLB Ground Floor explore the programme

Lunch 12.30 – 13.15 RLB Ground Floor A chance for you to network, view the posters and meet the exhibitors

Welcome to Plymouth University Daniel Gilling, Head of Plymouth Law School

Plenary: New Directions in Criminology:

13:15 – 14:30 RLB Lecture Theatre 1 Professor Elliott Currie, Professor of Criminology, Law and Society University of California & Professor Rowland Atkinson, Research Chair in Inclusive Society University of Sheffield

Refreshments and Ice Cream Reception Sponsored by ACJS 14:30 – 15:00 All delegates are invited to join us for an ice cream reception which has RLB Ground Floor been kindly sponsored by the Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences

15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session A

Feminist Criminology (Chair: Jo Brayford, University of South Wales)

Jo Brayford, University of South Wales Female Offenders: justice or ideological justification

Emma Milne, University of Essex A1 RLB 206 Rationality and responsibility: women, inappropriate pregnancy and dead newborn children – a feminist critique of infanticide and concealing the birth of a child

Claire Cohen, Nottingham Trent University We’re all screwed now? ‘Pro-feminist’ depictions of female on male rape - a Foucauldian analysis

Historical Perspectives on Crime and Justice (Chair: Henry Yeomans, University of Leeds)

Iain Channing, Plymouth University Crimes Against Fashion: A brief history of the prohibition of political A2 uniforms RLB 207

Samantha Pegg, Nottingham Trent University Children, Birds, Cats, Dogs, Goldfish and a Parrot. The ‘insanity’ of Agnes Norman.

Henry Yeomans, University of Leeds Understanding the Present through the Past: Investigating the Value of Historical Criminology

Theorising Criminology (Chair: Andrew Millie, Edge Hill University)

Andrew Millie, Edge Hill University New horizons in criminology: Marcel Duchamp and the meaning of A3 RLB 208 criminology

Gordon Hughes, Cardiff University Acts of conceptual recovery: situating Weber and Elias in contemporary sociological criminology

Young Offenders (Chair: Peter Squires, University of Brighton)

Peter Squires, University of Brighton Over-Criminalisation – the case of ‘Joint Enterprise’ prosecution A4 RLB 209

Ron Hinch, Jankie Ramnaraine, Phillip C. Shon University of Ontario Institute of Technology Offense Characteristics of the First Canadian School Shooting in Brampton, Ontario, 1975

Cultures of Drug Use (Chair: Gisella Hanley Santos, Plymouth University)

James Morgan, London Metropolitan University What explains long term heroin careers? A5 RLB 210 Rachel Evans, University of Leeds Pathways of young people's substance use

Claire Meehan, University of Auckland Researching Young Drug Using Communities Online

Visual Criminology: Theory and Method (Chair: Mary Bosworth, University of Oxford)

Kate West, University of Oxford Portraiture in Lombroso’s La donna delinquent

A6 RLB 303 Luigi Gariglio, University of Milan Doing ethnographic photo-elicitation interviews: Italian prison officers and the ‘inconvenient criminological truth’

Sarah Turnbull, University of Oxford The challenges and opportunities of using photo-voice in research on immigration detention and deportation

Learning as a Pathway to Desistance (Chair: Shaun McMann, The Open University)

Shaun McMann, The Open University

Education, Rehabilitation & Desistance A7 RLB 304

Joanna Mary Cursley, Retired formerly University of Exeter Time for an encore: exploring a symbiotic link between music, forming meaningful relationships and desistance

International Issues in Procedural Justice (Chair: Hannah Quirk, University of Manchester)

Hannah Quirk, University of Manchester The Right of Silence: An English Export?

A8 Asher Flynn, Monash University SMB 200 Negotiated Guilty Pleas, Deals and Prosecutorial Discretion: An Australian Experience

Anusha Devi H, School of Law, Christ University Bangalore Erroneous Convictions: A scrutiny on the causes, implications, consequences and remedies.

Gender-based violence in student communities/among young people: experience and perceptions (Chair: Sundari Anitha, University of Lincoln)

Vanita Sundaram, Understanding young people’s conceptualisations of violence: the role of gender in notions of ‘acceptability’.

A9 SMB 201 Ceryl Davies, University of Lincoln This is abuse? Voices of young women on the meaning(s) of intimate abuse.

Ravinder Barn, Rachael Powers, and Papia Sengupta, Royal Holloway, University of London Rape myths: A study of university students’ beliefs about sexual

Examining Dissent (Chair: Fiona Hutton, Institute of Criminology, Victoria University Wellington)

A10 Azrini Wahidin, Nottingham Trent University SMB 202 Femininity in Dissent: The Women of Armagh

Matt Clement, University of Winchester Appreciating the sound of the crowd

International Issues in Policing (Chair: Bill Dixon, University of Nottingham)

A11 SMB 203 Bill Dixon, University of Nottingham Policing Inquiries in Brixton and Khayelitsha: A Comparative Study

David Baker, Coventry University Deaths After Police Contact: The Effects of Article 2 of the European Convention on Human Rights

Olga Pleshkova, University of Birmingham From Segregation to Integration and Back Again? Women Police in Contemporary Russia

Crime Prevention (Chair: Stephen Shute, University of Sussex)

Stephen Shute, University of Sussex New Techniques to Prevent Sexual Reoffending: The Rise and Rise of A12 SMB 205 the Sexual Harm Prevention Order in the United Kingdom

Andromachi Tseloni, Loughborough University Burglary and Effective House Security Trends: Who has lost out during the crime falls in England and Wales?

16:45 – 18:15 Main Conference Parallel Session B

Media and Criminal Justice (Chair: Justin Ellis, University of Sydney)

Justin Ellis, University of Sydney A horizontal hierarchy of credibility? Police-media-public relations in the digital age B1 RLB 206 Sam Poyser, Nottingham Trent University Media investigations into miscarriages of justice: Filling an investigative gap?

Xanthe Mallett, University of New England One Academic’s Tips on How to Survive the Media Den

Contextualising Drug Use (Chair: Steve Wakeman, Liverpool John Moores University)

Steve Wakeman, Liverpool John Moores University The Moral Economy of Heroin: Reconstituting the Social in ‘Austerity Britain’ B2 RLB 207 Fiona Hutton, Institute of Criminology, Victoria University Wellington (Il)Legal Highs in New Zealand: the highs and lows of drug policy

Tammy Ayres, University of Leicester Drugs and Crime: The True Relationship?

Violent Crime (Chair: Christine Haddow, Canterbury Christ Church University)

Christine Haddow, Canterbury Christ Church University Mental Disorder, Masculinity and Violence: Exploring Processes of Change B3 RLB 208 Emmeline Taylor, The Australian National University On the edge of reason: exploring the motivations for armed robbery in Australia

Rick Sarre, University of South Australia Violent crime and the firearm connection: recent Australia experience

Working with Young Offenders (Chair: Iain Channing, Plymouth University)

Rocio Roles & Nikolaos Petropoulos, University of Arkansas at Little Rock, City University of New York Graduate Center/ John Jay B4 College of Criminal Justice RLB 209 Effectiveness of Community Policing in Reducing Youth Violence Rates

Alex Newbury, University of Brighton The impact of alcohol and gender on young people's offending - a need for more tailored education?

Governance and Crime (Chair: Dan Gilling, Plymouth University)

Neil Chappell, Plymouth University Between Swords and Spikes: Precarious Space and the disciplinary City

B5 RLB 210 Richard Lynch, Sheffield Hallam University 'Recovery' from drugs and crime: towards coercive constraints or positive regulation within policy?

Bodean Hedwards, Walk Free Foundation Measuring government responses to modern slavery

Serious Crime in Prison (Chair: Kate Gooch, University of Birmingham)

Kate Gooch, University of Birmingham Talking Blades, Black Mamba, Mobiles and Pad Debts: An ethnographic B6 study of the new dynamics of violence and bullying in England’s worst RLB 303 prison

Roberta Bernardino de CAmpos Novis, FGV Hard times: exploring the complex structures and activities of Brazilian prison gangs

Gender-based violence in student communities/among young people: challenges and interventions (Chair: Sundari Anitha, University of Lincoln)

Ruth Lewis, Susan Merine and Kathryn Kenney, University of Northumbria “I get together with my friends and try to change it.” Feminist students’ anti-violence activism B7 RLB 304 Sundari Anitha, Ana Jordan, Claire Markham, Zowie Davy, Jill Jameson & Aylwyn Walsh, University of Lincoln Stand Together: Challenging gender-based violence through prevention education in a UK university campus

Ruth Jones, University of Worcester Challenging Gender Based Violence in Student Communities: Interventions & challenges – A Case Study

Privatising Criminal Justice (Chair: Harry Annison, Law School, Southampton University) B8 SMB 200 Harry Annison, Law School, Southampton University From Publics to Markets: Surveying shifts in English penal policymaking

John Lea, University of Brighton Criminal justice, warfare and the rebirth of privatisation

John Deering & Martina Feilzer, University of South Wales & Bangor University Privatising Probation: is Transforming Rehabilitation the end of the Probation Ideal?

Critical and Convict Perspectives on Prisons and Penality (Chair: Patricia Gray, Plymouth University)

Jeffrey Ian Ross, University of Baltimore Convict Criminology and the struggle for Inclusion B9 SMB 201 Rod Earle, The Open University Convict Criminology: discovering founding figures in history

Jennifer Sloan, Sheffield Hallam University Saying the Unsayable: Foregrounding Men in the Prison System

Adventures in Ultra Realism (Chair: Oliver Smith, Plymouth University)

Steve Hall, Teesside Centre for Realist Criminology, The Siren Call of the Real: Can Criminology Accept Ultra-Realism? B10 SMB 202 Mark Horsley, University of Cumbria Why Moral Panics Don't Exist

Simon Winlow, Teesside Centre for Realist Criminology, Teesside University Ultra-realism and Politics

Police Identity and Culture (Chair: Janet Foster, LSE)

Janet Foster, LSE ‘It’s beneath the surface in all of us’: the emotions of murder investigation and how investigators manage them B11 SMB 203 Tom Cockcroft, Leeds Beckett University Policing and the Symbolic Victim: Locating the Child Victim in the Police Working Personality

Benjamin Goold, University of British Columbia The Working Culture of Covert Policing

Criminological Methodology 1: Field Dilemmas (Chair: Anne Foley, University of the West of England)

Anne Foley, University of the West of England B12 Never can say goodbye: Reflections on leaving the field SMB 205

Sarah Turnbull, University of Oxford Research intimacies: Building trust and navigating relationships in an immigration detention ethnography

Prosopography and Criminology: Fellow travellers on A Research Voyage? SOLON (Chair: Kim Stevenson, Plymouth University)

B13 David J. Cox, Wolverhampton University SMB 212 Pros and Cons - researching the lives and offences of Victorian convicts: advantages and limitations of a prosopographical approach

Kim Stevenson, Plymouth University ‘The Youngest Chief Constable ever’

Judith Rowbotham, Plymouth University Merry Men and Solons: Plymouth and South Devon Magistrates c1880- 1930

Main Conference Drinks Reception: Sponsored by Sage

The President of the British Society of Criminology Professor Loraine Gelsthorpe will award the following British Society of Criminology Prizes:

 Post-graduate Research Poster Prize 2015

 The National Award for Excellence in Teaching Criminology 2015 (Sponsored by Sage)

18:15 – 19:15  BSC Policing Network Early Career Prize 2015 (Sponsored by RLB Ground Floor Palgrave Macmillan)

 BSC Policing Network Annual Prize 2015

Introduction of the new editorial team for ‘Criminology and Criminal Justice’

All conference delegates are invited to join us on the ground floor of the Roland Levinsky Building for a drinks reception which has been kindly sponsored by Sage.

Main Conference 1st Night Meal & Social

19:15 onwards UPSU Delegates are invited to join us in the Students Union (UPSU) for a hot buffet, including Devon’s famous Jail Ale pie.

Thursday 2nd July 2015

Victims Network Meeting 08.00 – 09.00 RLB 210 (including refreshments)

08.30 – 09.00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor

09.00 – 10.30 Main Conference Parallel Session C

Cyber Crime C1 RLB 206 (Chair: Anita Lavorgna, University of Wolverhampton)

Anita Lavorgna, University of Wolverhampton Exploring the cyber-organised crime narrative: The hunt for a new bogeyman?

Ori Igwe, University of West London Cyber stalkers: Criminal deviants voyaging into the twenty first century

Kerry Hannigan, University of the Highlands and Islands - Perth College Protection and Security in a Technologically Advanced Society: Children and Young People’s Perspectives

Probation: Exploring Practitioner and Offender Perspectives (Chair: Jill Annison, Plymouth University)

Michael Teague, University of Derby C2 RLB 207 Doing probation work: views from the front line

Azrini Wahidin & Laura Garius, Nottingham Trent University Prolific Shoplifters:The Motivations and Opportunities driving Retail Theft

Examining Domestic Violence (Chair: Hayley Boxall, Australian Institute of Criminology)

Hayley Boxall, Australian Institute of Criminology The relevance of domestic violence typologies to policy and practice

C3 Nicole Westmarland, Durham University RLB 208 Can a leopard change its spots? Domestic violence perpetrator programmes in the UK

Bingul Durbas, University of Sussex Perpetrators of Domestic Violence: Interpretation of the role of women in Honour Based Violence

Examining Youth Justice (Chair: Ross Little, De Montfort University)

Ross Little, De Montfort University Education in a YOI

C4 Pete Harris, Newman University RLB 209 Exemplifying the youth work relationship and its desistance promoting potential

Nicola Carr & Clare Dwyer, Queen's University Belfast The Illusion of Less Consequence – Criminal Records and the Youth Justice System.

Examining Prison Systems (Chair: Alisa Stevens, University of Southampton)

Alisa Stevens, University of Southampton Thinking the ‘unthinkable’: Why British prisons should introduce conjugal visits C5 RLB 303

Aoife Watters, University College Dublin Prison Staff Discretion and the Discipline System

Colette Barry, Dublin Institute of Technology ‘You can’t fall apart in this job’: Exploring prison officers’ experiences of deaths in custody and their perspectives on coping and moving on in the aftermath

Children of Prisoners: International Perspectives (Chair: Rachel Condry, University of Oxford)

Joyce A. Arditti, Virginia Tech, USA A Stress Process Model for Understanding the Effects of Parental Incarceration on Child Trauma Symptoms C6 RLB 304 Else Knudsen, London School of Economics The hidden costs of imprisonment for families of prisoners

Fiona Donson & Aisling Parkes, University College Cork Realising The Rights of Children Visiting Prison in Ireland: Challenges and Opportunities

Green Criminology 1 (Chair: Angus Nurse, Middlesex University)

Angus Nurse, Middlesex University A Global Movement: NGOs and the Policing of International Wildlife Trafficking

C7 SMB 200 Erica von Essen, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences Policing peers: a socio-criminological perspective on balancing fair chase and efficiency in sport hunting

Matthew Hall, University of Lincoln Environmental Mediation and Restorative Justice: Realistic alternatives to criminal justice for achieving environmental justice?

Criminological Methodology 2: Reflexivity (Chair: Lamia Irfan, London School of Economics and Political Science)

Lamia Irfan, London School of Economics and Political Science Reflexive Reflections on Life Story Interviews with Muslim Male ex- offenders

C8 Benjamin Goold, University of British Columbia SMB 201 Watching the Watchers: Reflections on an Ethnography of Covert Policing

Francois Steyn, Department of Social Work and Criminology, University of Pretoria Reflections on (post-apartheid) publications in a South African Criminology journal: A 20-year voyage on a ship under construction

Technology in Policing (Chair: Philip Wane, Nottingham Trent University)

Philip Wane, Nottingham Trent University QuadCOPters & Robbers: A Criminological Consideration of Drones

C9 Blake Matthew Randol, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee SMB 202 American police militarization in the era of homeland security: An application of interrupted time-series analysis

Kirk Miller, Department of Sociology; Northern Illinois University Watching the Watchers: Theorizing Cameras, Cops and Police Legitimacy in the 21st Century

Gangs: categorizing, identifying and controlling (Chair: Andrew Wilson, Nottingham Trent University)

James Treadwell & Kate Gooch, University of Birmingham C10 An ASBO for violent gangsters or just continuing criminalization of young SMB 203 people? – Thinking about the value of Gangbo

Patrick Williams, Manchester Metropolitan University Criminalising the other: challenging the race-gang nexus

Andrew Wilson, Nottingham Trent University Drugs, policing, and gangs: the moral economy of justice

Vulnerable Victims (Chair: Marianne Hester, )

Marianne Hester, University of Bristol Reflections on criminal (in)justice in cases of rape

Pamela Davies, Northumbria University C11 SMB 205 Exposing the (lack of) support for families of child sexual abuse: The Kelly Trust Project

Mary Iliadis, Monash University Assessing the Rights of Sexual Assault Victims within the Adversarial Framework: The Viability of Victim Representation within the Prosecution Process

Controlling Drugs (Chair: Gisella Hanley-Santos, Plymouth University)

Julian Buchanan, Institute of Criminology, Victoria University of Wellington Ending Drug Prohibition with New Prohibition?

C12 SMB 212 Gulzat Botoeva, University of Essex Blurring the lines between legal and illegal: The legitimation of hashish production in Kyrgyzstan

David Brewster, Cardiff University Comparing Cannabis Control: Convergence and Divergence in England & Wales and the Netherlands

Restorative Justice (Chair: Nikki McKenzie, University of the West of England)

Nikki McKenzie, University of the West of England Implementing Restorative Justice and Approaches in Bristol: Social control via the back door perhaps? C13 SMB 312

Philip Hodgson & Charlotte Hargreaves, University of Derby Youth Restorative Disposals - Findings from a cohort study

Angela Marinari, University of Portsmouth Restorative Justice and Sexual Abuse: Survivors' Views

10.30 – 11.00 Refreshments & Pastries RLB Ground Floor

11.00 – 12.30 Main Conference Parallel Session D

Criminalising Youth (Chair: Nicola Carr, Queen’s University Belfast)

Nicola Carr, Queen’s University Belfast D1 Risks, Rights and Justice – Young people and paramilitary violence SMB 102A

Colin Webster, Leeds Beckett University The role of austerity policies in marginalising and criminalising sex workers and poor young men

Locating Drug Use (Chair: Mwenda Kailemia, Keele University)

Mwenda Kailemia, Keele University D2 SMB 102B When Santa was Biker: Sociopathy and Doping in Sports

Christine Schierano, London Southbank University Drug dealing within the gay club scene in London

Policing and Restorative Justice (Chair: Jacki Tapley, Institute of Criminal Justice Studies, University of Portsmouth)

Jacki Tapley, Institute of Criminal Justice Studies, University of Portsmouth Arrest and restore? Challenging criminal justice responses to domestic abuse D3 RLB 208

Giuseppe Maglione, Edinburgh Napier University Policing the ethos. The political rationality of Restorative justice

Kelly J Stockdale, Durham University “It’s only easy if you’re the Chief Constable, isn’t it?” An exploration of police officer cultural resistance and practical barriers to doing restorative justice

State interests in cyber security: language, policies and action (Chair: Nicholas Gervassis, Plymouth University)

David Barnard-Wills & David Wright, Trilateral Research & Consulting The impact of cyber security on the balance between privacy and security in EU and International policy D4 RLB 209 X.P. Voyatzis-Hernandez; Nicholas J. Gervassis, Plymouth University State interests in cyber-security - Examining the UK Perspective

Mgr. Jakub Harašta, Institute of Law and Technology, Faculty of Law, Masaryk University Cyber security in the Czech Republic

Procedural Justice (Chair: Vicky Kemp, University of Nottingham)

Vicky Kemp, University of Nottingham D5 RLB 210 Safeguarding young suspects interrogated by the police

David Dixon, UNSW Interrogation, Integrity and Criminal Justice

Barry Mitchell, Coventry University Reviewing Whole Life Orders

Theorising Security and Punishment (Chair: Matt Bowden, Dublin Institute of Technology)

Matt Bowden, Dublin Institute of Technology Producing, Consuming and [re]Distributing Security: Questions of Fields and Capitals

D6 Anastasia Chamberlen & Henrique Carvalho, Birkbeck / City RLB 303 University London Why Punishment Pleases: Towards an Affective Social Theory of Criminal Justice

Lizzie Seal, University of Sussex Safety, fear and social change in the public’s pro-death penalty discourse in mid twentieth-century Britain

Prisoners' families: New perspectives (Chair: Rachel Condry, University of Oxford)

Mark Halsey, Flinders University, Australia "Everyone is in damage control": The meaning and performance of family for second and third generation prisoners

Anna Kotova, University of Oxford D7 Serving Time Too - How Partners of Long-term Prisoners Experience RLB 304 Time

Marie Hutton, University of Birmingham Who are you calling troubled?

Rachel Condry, University of Oxford Prisoners' families and social justice

Examining Victimhood (Chair: Linda Asquith, Nottingham Trent University)

Linda Asquith, Nottingham Trent University Worthy Victims? The state creation of a victim hierarchy

D8 Vicky Heap & Marian Duggan, Sheffield Hallam University / SMB 200 University of Kent Monitoring the Manifestos: A Reconceptualised Ideal Victim Materialises?

Pamela Davies, Northumbria University Processing Victimhood: Navigating the Criminal Justice ‘System’

Hate Crime (Chair: Chris Pac-Soo, Plymouth University)

Amanda Haynes & Jennifer Schweppe, University of Limerick D9 The Language of Hate: Civil Society Responses to the Hate Crime SMB 201 Paradigm in the Absence of Legislation

S.Chandra Mohan, Singapore Management University Singapore’s Holistic Approach to Hate Crimes

Calling the police? Responses to domestic violence Policing Network (Chair: Louise Westmarland, The Open University)

Andy Myhill & Kelly Johnson, College of Policing / Durham D10 University SMB 202 Police use of discretion in response to domestic violence

Louise Westmarland, The Open University Calling the police? Are 'domestics' still 'rubbish' calls?

Kate Butterworth & Nicole Westmarland, Durham University Victim’s views on policing partner violence

Theorising Policing (Chair: Elaine Campbell, Newcastle University)

Elaine Campbell, Newcastle University D11 Policing as assemblage: the emergence of digital vigilantism SMB 203

Gareth Addidle, Plymouth University Meta-bureaucracy, heterarchy and policing

Changing Probation (Chair: Pamela Ugwudike, Swansea University)

Pamela Ugwudike, Swansea University From ‘what works’ to ‘how things work’: strategies for harmonising criminal justice practice with the evidence-base D12 SMB 205

Sam King, University of Leicester Old Wine, New Bottles? Or Innovation in IOM?

Anthea Hucklesby, University of Leeds ‘Just another alternative to custody?’ Electronic monitoring in Europe.

Countering Terrorism (Chair: Toby Miles-Johnson, University of Southampton)

Suzanna Fay-Ramirez & Toby Miles-Johnson, The University of Queensland / University of Southampton D13 SMB 212 Fear of Terrorism and the Misperception of Ethnic Group Size

Pete Fussey, University of Essex Security, Surveillance and Space: Contested Topologies of Anticipatory Urban Counter-Terrorist Surveillance

Buffet Lunch A chance for you to network, view the posters and meet the exhibitors RLB Ground Floor 12.30 – 13.15 British Society of Criminology Annual General Meeting RLB 206/207 (Buffet lunch provided)

Main Conference Plenary: Re-discovering Restorative Justice

13.15 – 14.30 RLB Lecture Theatre 1 Professor Kathleen Daly, Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice Griffith University & Professor Kieran McEvoy, Professor of Law and Transitional Justice Queens University Belfast

14:30 – 15:00 Refreshments and Cream Tea RLB Ground Floor

15:00 – 16:30 Main Conference Parallel Session E

Delivering Youth Justice (Chair: Rachel Morris, University of York)

Rachel Morris, University of York ‘Bloody Scaled Approach, it’s just a load of old nonsense’ Practitioner reflections on the Scaled Approach to Youth Justice E1 RLB 206 Stephen Case, Swansea University Children First, Offenders Second positive youth justice

Stephen Case & Aaron Brown, Swansea University The Bureau: A children first model of diversion in the Youth Justice System

Women in academic criminology: opportunities, challenges and success. A Women, Crime and Criminal Justice Network Roundtable (Chair: Anthea Hucklesby, University of Leeds) E2 RLB 207

Anthea Hucklesby, University of Leeds Michele Burman, University of Glasgow Loraine Gelsthorpe, University of Cambridge

Visiting Prisons (Chair: Fiona Donson, University College Cork)

Fiona Donson, University College Cork E3 Realising the Rights of Children Visiting Prison in Ireland: Challenges RLB 208 and Opportunities

Chris Holligan, University of the West of Scotland An Absent Presence - Visitor Narratives to Scottish Prisons

Policing Vulnerable Victims (Chair: Corinne Funnell, University of the West of England)

Corinne Funnell, University of the West of England E4 Hate crime investigators: “Some people would say that’s not police work” RLB 209

Phil Kowalick, University of New England How can we better protect at risk witnesses in the criminal justice system?

Redefining Victims (Chair: Hannah Bows, Durham University)

Hannah Bows, Durham University E5 RLB 210 The extent of sexual violence against older people in the UK

David Porteous, Middlesex University Traumatic Times: Conceptualising the circumstances and needs of young people who have offended and been a victim of crime, abuse and violence

Linda Asquith, Nottingham Trent University Exonerees of Miscarriages of Justice – Forgotten Victims?

Unpacking Imprisonment (Chair: Jennifer Sloan, Sheffield Hallam University)

Jennifer Sloan, Sheffield Hallam University E6 RLB 303 Men, Prison and Aspirational Masculinities

Mark Halsey, Flinders University, Australia The Kids Are Not Alright: Etiologies of Intergenerational Imprisonment

Locating The Border Through Law And Practice (Chair: Ana Aliverti, School of Law, University of Warwick)

Leanne Weber, School of Social Sciences, Monash University Border as Method: researching the policing of internal borders

Ana Aliverti, School of Law, University of Warwick E7 RLB 304 Criminal justice borderscapes: citizenship, punishment and belonging

Sanja Milivojevic, Department of Criminology, University of New South Wales Unravelling the border conundrums in the Western Balkan: Re-bordering Global South through law, politics, citizenship and technology

On the Edge of Criminality (Chair: Nic Groombridge, St Mary's University Twickenham)

Nic Groombridge, St Mary's University Twickenham The Criminalisation of Sport: the banning or Institutionalisation of deviant leisures and pleasures

E8 Victoria Silverwood, Cardiff University SMB 201 Criminal? Deviant? or Heroic Sportsman? Negotiating the legitimacy of bare-knuckle fist-fights in professional ice hockey

James Heydon, University of Sheffield Exploring the Criminogenic Potential of ‘Sustainable Development’: Indigenous Experiences of Environmental Harm and Consensus-based Regulation in the Canadian Oil Sands

Courts and Court Processes (Chair: Amy Kirby, Birkbeck, University of London)

Amy Kirby, Birkbeck, University of London Effectively engaging victims, witnesses and defendants at the Crown Court: the role of ‘court culture’ E9 SMB 202 Anqi Shen, Teesside University Female judges and their position in the Chinese judiciary: a preliminary inquiry

Clare Gunby & Anna Carline, University of Leicester An examination of rape law, policy and resistance at trial

Vegetables and Leopards: conceptualising growth and change in E10 SMB 203 desistance and recovery identities (Chair: David Best, Sheffield Hallam University)

Jake Phillips, Sheffield Hallam University Towards a rhizomatic understanding of the desistance process

Paula Hamilton, Sheffield Hallam University Desisting Men: narrative transitions of masculine identities

Jamie Irving, Sheffield Hallam University Constructing Recovery in AA- the use of 'linguistic-echoes'

Sarah Goodwin, Sheffield Hallam University "Starting to be me again": Interactions between identity and desistance

Kathy Albertson, Sheffield Hallam University Distinctions in civilian, recovery and desistance identities in veteran cohorts

Reassessing Hate Crime: Key Findings from Recent Research Projects International Network for Hate Studies (Chair: Jon Garland, University of Surrey)

Mark Walters, University of Sussex Feeling Others' Pain: Hate Crime’s Indirect Effects on Two Communities E11 SMB 205

Jon Garland, University of Surrey The Policing of Hate Crime: What Do Victims Want? Assessing the Findings from a Large-scale Hate Crime Victimisation Study

Loretta Trickett, Nottingham Trent University The Policing of Hate Crime in Nottinghamshire

Penality and Punishment (Chair: Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto)

Kelly Hannah-Moffat & Paula Maurutto, University of Toronto 'Risk data' and extension of penal security : a study of police disclosures on non-conviction records

E12 SMB 212 Elaine Freer, Robinson College, University of Cambridge Punishment and rehabilitation – uneasy bedfellows under section 44 of the Crime and Courts Act 2013?

Lorana Bartels, University of Canberra Do swift and certain sanctions offer some hope for the criminal justice system?

Innovations in Restorative Justice (Chair: Isla Masson, Coventry University)

Isla Masson, Coventry University Reducing the Female Prison Population: A Restorative Justice Approach

E13 SMB 312 Angie Neville, University of Derby A critical analysis of the utilisation of Restorative Justice within the Domestic Abuse arena

Natacha Harding, University of Winchester Restorative Justice: A Criminological Perspective of Political Will

Network Meetings

International Network for Hate Studies Meeting RLB 206 16:30 – 17:30 Policing Network Meeting RLB 207 Women, Crime and Criminal Justice Network Business Meeting RLB 208

(Refreshments provided)

Conference Dinner Drinks Reception

Holiday Inn, Penthouse 17:30 – 18:30 Welcome to the Holiday Inn, Plymouth for a pre-dinner drinks reception Restaurant on the penthouse level of the Holiday Inn to take in the beautiful panorama of Plymouth and the Plymouth Sound.

Holiday Inn, Mariners 18:45 – 19:30 Conference Dinner Pre Dinner Speaker Suite

Conference Dinner

During the Conference Dinner, the new President of the British Society of Criminology will thank the out-going President, Professor Loraine Gelsthorpe and The British Society of Criminology prizes will be Holiday Inn, Mariners 19:30 onwards awarded by the new President: Suite

The Brian Williams Prize 2015 Criminology Book Prize 2015 (sponsored by Routledge) The British Society of Criminology Outstanding Achievement Award 2015 will be presented by Professor Jo Phoenix.

Friday 3rd July 2015

08.30 – 09.00 Refreshments, Fruit & Pastries RLB Ground Floor

09.00 – 10.30 Main Conference Parallel Session F

Border Control Issues (Chair: Nicoletta Policek, EUROCRIME)

Nicoletta Policek, EUROCRIME Migration control and the anti-trafficking action plan in Italy

F1 RLB 206 Wing Kay Chiu, Hong Kong Customs Criminalizing Chinese consumerism: the baby milk dilemma in Hong Kong

Brandy Cochrane, Monash University Mothers' Migration Motivations

Assessing Impact: Technology to prevent and respond to crime (Chair: Katharine Boyd, University of Exeter)

F2 RLB 208 Katharine Boyd (Farrimond, H.R.; Ralph, N), University of Exeter Testing the impact of breathalyzers on alcohol-related violence: Quasi- experimental research

Hannah R. Farrimond (Boyd, K.; Ralph, N), University of Exeter Depersonalizing the violent encounter: Security staff experiences of using breathalyzer technology in the night-time economy

Dana Wilson-Kovacs, University of Exeter Rapid DNA: Expectations, demand and delivery in the UK crime investigation process

Constructions of Crime (Chair: Anna Sergi, University of West London)

Anna Sergi, University of West London The new offence of participation in organised crime activities in England and Wales, its immediate criticisms and dilemmas for criminal policy, research and legal practice. F3 RLB 209

Magda Maszczynska, Plymouth University Catch me if you can. Discrepancies between organised crime activities, law enforcement, and legislation.

Khamael Al-Faris, Plymouth University Constructing the criminality of foreign nationals in the UK

Current Challenges Facing Youth Justice Roundtable (Chair: Patricia Gray, Plymouth University)

F4 Patricia Gray, Plymouth University RLB 210 Jo Phoenix, University of Leicester Stephen Case, Swansea University Nicola Carr, Queen's University Belfast

Challenging Legitimacy (Chair: Gareth Addidle, Plymouth University)

Carina O'Reilly, Anglia Ruskin University Local policing, legitimacy and accountability

F5 RLB 303 Bill Tupman, University of Exeter Can Justice and Home Affairs policy at European Union level achieve legitimacy in the United Kingdom?

Saskia Hufnagel and James Gale, Queen Mary University of London International Police Cooperation: The Question of Legitimacy

Gender and Risk (Chair: Sharon Beckett)

Annie Crowley, University of Glasgow ‘It’s our anxiety that keeps a lot of girls locked up’: Practitioner

perceptions of practice and decision making regarding ‘at risk’ young RLB 304 F6 women in Scotland

Rachel Swann, Cardiff University Class, status and partying: women's responsibility for their personal safety in a night-time economy

Structures of Deception (Chair: Jörg Wiegratz, University of Leeds) F7 SMB 200 Jörg Wiegratz, University of Leeds Fighting structures of deception? Anti-fraud measures in a neoliberal market society - the case of Uganda

Mwenda Kailemia, Keele University The McGuffins of International Crimes: The International Criminal Court and its powerful friends.

Criminological Methodology 3: Innovation (Chair: Aaron Pycroft, University of Portsmouth)

Aaron Pycroft, University of Portsmouth Forgiveness as Potentiality in Criminal Justice

F8 SMB 201 James Martin, Macquarie University Criminology on the digital frontier: Methods and ethics in cryptomarket research

Rebecca Pillinger, University of Edinburgh Measuring offender specialisation: a new multilevel modelling approach

10:30 – 11:00 Refreshments RLB Ground Floor

Main Conference Plenary: Immigration Detention: Confinement in a Global World

Professor Mary Bosworth, Assistant Director, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford & Professor Sharon Pickering, Professor of Criminology, RLB Lecture 11:00 – 12:30 Monash University Theatre 2 & Professor Ben Bowling, Deputy Dean, Kings College London

Closing Address Dr Daniel Gilling, Head of Plymouth Law School

12:30 – 13:15 Packed Lunch RLB Ground Floor

13:15 onwards End of Main Conference