First published in Great Britain in 2017 by
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Contributors
Obijiofor Aginam is assistant director and head of governance for Global Health at the United Nations UniversityInternational Institute for Global Health (UNUIIGH) in Kuala Lumpur, and concurrently adjunct research professor of law at Carleton University, and visiting professor in the IR3S, University of Tokyo. Dr Aginam has held visiting professorships at universities in Costa Rica, Italy, South Africa and Japan. He is the author of Global health governance: International law and public health in a divided world (2005, University of Toronto Press). He holds a PhD from the University of British Columbia.
Gabriel Amitsis is associate professor of social security law in the Department of Business Administration at the Technology University of Athens, Greece. He has undertaken academic research and teaching since 1998 on the regulation of social security, anti-poverty, employment, social entrepreneurship and migration policies. He is the author and co-author of 20 books and has published in international edited books and journals.
Linda Asquith is a senior lecturer in criminology at Leeds Beckett University, UK, and has previously worked at Nottingham Trent University, UK, and the University of Leeds, UK. Her PhD on post-genocide life was awarded by the University of Huddersfield, UK, in 2015. Her current research focuses on life after miscarriages of justice.
David Balsamo is professor of social science and dean of faculty at the University of Chester, UK. He has worked as a painter and decorator, operating theatre technician, probation officer and latterly as an academic. His varied career has provided the impetus for a sustained interest and commitment to the sociology and political economy of work. Davids doctorate examined the management of teaching and research in the neo-corporate university and was informed by the perspectives and cognitive dissonances of being an academic manager.
Philip Bean is emeritus professor of criminology and criminal justice at the University of Loughborough, UK, and a former director of the Midlands Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice. He was secretary (199396) and later president of the British Society of Criminology (199699) and an associate of the General Medical Council (200005), sitting on their Fitness to Practice, Health and the Professional Panels. He is the author/editor of over 20 books and numerous papers in learned journals, mainly on mental disorder and crime, and drugs and crime, but also on other matters in criminology, namely, criminological theory. He is currently (since 2014) a visiting scholar at the University of Cambridge, UK.
Mark Bendall is a senior lecturer in politics at the University of Chester, UK. He has published on corporate social responsibility and state power, and has given conference papers spanning identity politics and criminalised identities. In 2007, he was shortlisted for Marketing Initiative of the Year at the Times Higher Awards.
Monish Bhatia is a lecturer in criminology at the Abertay University, Scotland. His teaching and research surrounds borders and the control of immigration, racism and harm. Monish is currently co-editing a volume on Media, crime and racism. Last year, he successfully completed a Carnegie Trust-funded project on destitution and drug use among asylum seekers, and his doctoral thesis focused on the impact of policies and procedures on asylum seekers and illegal migrants in the UK.
Josepha Close is a researcher in international law who concluded her doctoral thesis at Middlesex University, London, UK. She holds a masters degree in law from the University of Lige, Belgium, an LLM in public international law from Queen Mary University, London, UK, and a graduate diploma in law from BPP University, London, UK. Her research interests include international criminal law, human rights and transitional justice.
Salvatore Coluccello works in the School of Humanities at Coventry University, UK. His main research interests are in organised crime, human trafficking and people smuggling, as well as the contemporary history, politics and culture of Italy. He is the author of Challenging the mafia mystique: Cosa Nostra from legitimisation to denunciation (2016, Palgrave Macmillan), he also co-edited Eurafrican migration, legal economic and social responses to irregular migration (2015, Palgrave Macmillan) and is currently working on a documentary exploring the status of the mafia and anti-mafia movement in Sicily.
Karen Corteen is a senior lecturer in criminal justice at Liverpool John Moores University, UK. Areas Karen has published in include victimology, critical criminology and hate crime. Her research interests comprise: zemiology; occupational-related harms within the sports entertainment industry; victimisation, survival and resistance; and visual victimology.
Meriel DArtrey is head of the Department of Social and Political Science and a senior lecturer in politics at the University of Chester, UK. Meriel has an MA in politics from the University of Edinburgh and an MSc from the London School of Economics, UK, in the history of political thought. Her research for her DProf was on the teaching and learning of politics.
Bleddyn Davies has been a lecturer in law at Liverpool John Moores University, UK, since 2011. Prior to that, he was a teaching fellow and PhD candidate at the University of Liverpool, UK, completing his PhD in 2010. Among other teaching interests, he teaches the law of armed conflict at undergraduate and postgraduate level. His research interests are primarily public law.