SAGE Publications Ltd
1 Olivers Yard
55 City Road
London EC1Y 1SP
SAGE Publications Inc.
2455 Teller Road
Thousand Oaks, California 91320
SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd
B 1/I 1 Mohan Cooperative Industrial Area
Mathura Road
New Delhi 110 044
SAGE Publications Asia-Pacific Pte Ltd
3 Church Street
#10-04 Samsung Hub
Singapore 049483
Alexandra Fanghanel, Emma Milne, Giulia F. Zampini, Stacy Banwell and Michael Fiddler, 2021
First published 2021
Apart from any fair dealing for the purposes of research or private study, or criticism or review, as permitted under the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988, this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form, or by any means, only with the prior permission in writing of the publishers, or in the case of reprographic reproduction, in accordance with the terms of licences issued by the Copyright Licensing Agency. Enquiries concerning reproduction outside those terms should be sent to the publishers.
Library of Congress Control Number: 2020938336
British Library Cataloguing in Publication data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
ISBN 978-1-5264-9113-8
ISBN 978-1-5264-9112-1 (pbk)
Editor: Natalie Aguilera
Editorial assistant: Eve Williams
Production editor: Sarah Cooke
Marketing manager: Susheel Gokarakonda
Cover design: Francis Kenney
Typeset by: C&M Digitals (P) Ltd, Chennai,
Printed in the UK
At SAGE we take sustainability seriously. Most of our products are printed in the UK using responsibly sourced papers and boards. When we print overseas we ensure sustainable papers are used as measured by the PREPS grading system. We undertake an annual audit to monitor our sustainability.
About the authors
Alexandra FanghanelSenior lecturer in Criminology at the University of Greenwich
I am a queer, non-monogamous, femme. I am a middle-class, cisgender, white European, who does not consider herself to have any disabilities. I share the care of my two young children with my partner.
I research fear of crime, security, sexuality and sexual practice in public space. I use queer, feminist, post-structuralist and anti-colonialist approaches to analyse power and to strive for social justice.
I see education as a tool through which to become free and to begin to undo the injustice of the world; that is why I am so committed to radical, critical pedagogy. When I was a student, I was encouraged to read promiscuously, and that is what I try to do, and to encourage in others: be gone, disciplinary borders.
My book,
Disrupting Rape Culture: Public Space, Sexuality, and Revolt (Bristol University Press, 2020) is a riot.Emma MilneAssistant Professor in Criminal Law and Criminal Justice at Durham University
I am a white, middle-class, dyslexic, queer woman. I am an activist for womens rights, specifically reproductive rights and justice. I am a feminist. My research is informed by and uses feminism, intersectionality and post-structuralism. My approach to law and legal research is from Feminist Legal Theory and Critical Legal Studies perspectives.
My research and teaching are interdisciplinary, focused on criminal law and criminal justice responses to women who are deemed to be criminal or deviant, specifically those suspected of newborn-child killing and foetal harm. The wider context of my work is social, cultural and legal controls and regulations of all women, notably in relation to motherhood, pregnancy, sex and reproduction. I am the author of
Criminal Justice Responses to Maternal Filicide: Judging the Failed Mother (Emerald, 2021) and co-edited
Women and the Criminal Justice System: Failing Victims and Offenders? (Palgrave, 2018).Giulia Federica ZampiniSenior lecturer in Criminology at the University of Greenwich
I am a feminist, cisgender woman. I am Italian, bisexual and middle-class. I practise ethical non-monogamy. On the UK ethnicity classification forms, I tick the box any other white background, but people call me olive-skinned and usually cannot tell where I am from.
My formal academic studies span across history, politics, social policy and socio-legal studies, but I am also interested in anthropology, ethics and moral psychology. I am attracted to a variety of theoretical and epistemological positions, including but not limited to feminism standpoint theory, critical theory and critical realism.
My research interests centre around evidence and policy on drugs, prostitution, morality, harm reduction, decriminalisation and prison education. Recently, I have become obsessed with hierarchies and have been reflecting on their naturalisation.
I am dedicated to research, activism and advocacy for harm reduction across drug policy and prostitution policy, and committed to enabling platforms for marginalised communities, including people who use drugs and people who are incarcerated.
My current ongoing project, People and dancefloors: Narratives of drug-taking, involves team-based participatory action research through film.Stacy BanwellPrincipal lecturer in Criminology at the University of Greenwich, programme leader: MSc Criminology, Gender and Sexualities, University of Greenwich
I am a cisgender, middle-class, heterosexual woman of colour. I am a vegan and a supporter of the climate movement.
My background is in Criminology and Criminal Justice. My current research interests are:
Gender and the violence(s) of war and armed conflict, including the relationship between war/armed conflict and climate insecurity.
Gender and economic foreign policy, specifically US foreign policy on abortion. I am currently reviewing the impact of President Trumps revised global gag rule (GGR) and the defunding of UNFPA in humanitarian and war-affected settings.
These topics are addressed in my monograph
Gender and the Violence(s) of War and Armed Conflict: More Dangerous to be a Woman? (Emerald Publishing, 2020). This work draws on Critical, Feminist and Visual Criminology; International Relations, Security Studies (including environmental security), Post-colonial Studies and Gender Studies.
I am a feminist who aligns herself with postcolonial and transnational feminism.
My research practice is informed by feminist standpoint theory (which I apply to both human and non-human animals) and participatory action research.Michael FiddlerAssociate Professor of Criminology at the University of Greenwich
I am a cisgender, white, middle-class man. My background is in Criminology.
My research has explored prison architecture, as well as the ways in which the gothic and uncanny can be applied to representations of imprisonment and violence. My current project is focused upon Ghost Criminology and unpacking the ways in which the conceptual metaphors of haunting and spectrality can be applied to crime and punishment.