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Institute for Research in Criminology, Community, Education and Social Justice areas of expertise

Emotion and Criminal Justice Research Cluster

The cluster meets bi-monthly to discuss the topic of emotion within the field of criminal justice. Membership to the cluster is trans-disciplinary and includes academics from the fields of sociology, criminology, nursing, speech and language therapy, social work, social policy and midwifery.

The group offers academics an opportunity to consolidate their interests together and move towards success in publishing, research tenure and staff development. We also welcome academics and practitioners from outside the university.

Aims of the cluster:

  • Collectively explore the topic of emotion within the criminal justice field
  • Expand knowledge, research and teaching on this topic
  • Support and peer review publications, presentations and teaching materials across the cluster
  • Identify opportunities for collaborative multi-disciplinary partnerships
  • Network with other emotion scholars, researchers and practitioners from across and outside the university
  • Source external funding to support cluster activity such as conference attendance, group symposiums, internships and research
  • Identify internal funding opportunities to increase post-graduate scholarships and boost cluster activity
  • Promote research and innovation in line with Â鶹ӰԺ/ faculty research strategies

Activity and membership

The Cluster meets bi-monthly to discuss the topic of emotion within the field of criminal justice. Membership to the cluster is trans-disciplinary and includes academics from the fields of sociology, criminology, nursing, speech and language therapy, social work, social policy and midwifery.

The group offers academics an opportunity to consolidate their interests together and move towards success in publishing, research tenure and staff development. We also welcome academics and practitioners from outside the university.

Contact us

Please contact the convenor of the cluster if you are interested in joining or contributing. 

Dr Victoria Knight 
E: vknight@dmu.ac.uk

Sexual Violence/Domestic Violence (SV/DV) Research Network

The SV/DV Research Network at Â鶹ӰԺ started in 2012 as a small collaboration between the Community and Criminal Justice Division and the Faculty of Business and Law. Since then, the network has rapidly expanded to include a wide range of academic staff across the faculties of Arts, Design and Humanities, Computing, Engineering and Media, Health and Life Sciences and Business and Law, from a variety of subject disciplines, together with professionals in other non-academic organisational roles.

Staff across the network have established a number of strong partnerships with other academics, government bodies, policy makers, statutory, private and voluntary sector professionals and victim/survivor groups as a result of collaborative research and learning development work at local, regional, European and international levels.

A strength of the network is its cross-disciplinary nature, which provides new and innovative ways of creating dialogue, investigating and influencing policy and practice.

The network’s primary objectives are to facilitate and support staff, students, policy makers, external agencies and the public in addressing issues relating to SV/DV and it seeks to achieve this via four core areas of activity:

  • Research and policy impact
  • Knowledge transfer, including seminar and conference events
  • Interdisciplinary teaching and programme development
  • Dissemination and publication

Education Research Group

The Education Research Group (ERG) focuses upon research into policy, pedagogy and practice in the full range of educational contexts. Its key areas of focus include: higher education policy, pedagogy and practice, in particular related to creativity, entrepreneurship and student-as-producer; academic labour and the political economy of higher education; alternative and co-operative higher education; the impact of neoliberal education policy, in particular on primary and higher education; critical race theory and critical feminism in the educational experiences of students and parents; intersectional experiences of schooling; educational psychology and the concept of resilience in the student experience, and in educational transitions; music education and the professional development of music educators; Forest schools and environmental education; schooling and spatial theory; prison education. The ERG is developing impact case studies: in relation to translational research and the relationship between policy and practice in a range of educational contexts; healthcare education, in particular in relation to conceptions of hygiene in primary schools; music education and the professional development of music educators; and the pedagogic and practice-based implementation of prison education.

Policing Research Group

A cross-university multidisciplinary group working with local, national and international forces to consider the wide-ranging issues and challenges facing modern policing.

Together we have completed a range of research projects:

  • Reducing violence in the night-time economy
  • Police leadership and the strategic management of mega-events
  • Burglary reduction
  • Exploring stop and search
  • Complex systems and managing change
  • Serious offending by mobile European criminals
  • Crime prevention practices of the Serious Organised Economic Crime Unit
  • Community management of sex offenders
  • Multi-agency public protection panels
  • The challenges of modernisation and professionalisation and the Royal St Lucia Police Force
  • Policing as critical reflective practice
  • Policing and dyslexia
  • Problems of effective co-operation: London 2012 Olympics and lessons learnt