We are pleased to announce the appointment of two new staff members. Dr Mwenda Kailemia has joined us as a Lecturer in Criminology. His PhD thesis focused on the ground level policing of the impact of transnational migration after the expansion of the European Union. Mwenda will be leading our level two module, 'Policing and the Police'. His wider research interests are in transnational security, policing governance, and anti-terrorism in emerging economies.
Dr Ala Sirriyeh will take up her post as Lecturer in Sociology later this month. Ala's PhD research has been published as Inhabiting borders: a study of 16-25 year old refugee women's narratives of home. Ala has research interests in migration, identities, cities, and personal relationships. She will be contributing to a
range of teaching on the sociology programme, including
our introductory module, 'Social inequalities in the contemporary world'.
Monday, 30 September 2013
Monday, 23 September 2013
New publication - Living with 'Aliens'
Clare Griffiths, Lecturer in Criminology, explores public attitudes towards immigration in a new article in Criminal Justice Matters
According
to a recent
article entitled 'Immigration is British society’s biggest problem'
(Boffey,
2013) nearly a third of the British public who took part in a survey
perceive
immigration to be one of the greatest causes of social division.
Segregation
and the ‘parallel lives’ that diverse cultures lead have been high on
the political
agenda ever since the 2001 Northern riots in the towns of Oldham,
Bradford and
Burnley. Government policies have attempted to promote community
cohesion and
integration in diverse neighbourhoods. The topic of immigration and its
imagined ‘threat’ to ‘British’ values and to ‘British’ communities has
arisen
again recently with both the Romanian and Bulgarian migration flows, and
the
killing of British soldier Lee Rigby; both of which have sparked a
hostile
response in negative media portrayals of immigrants or in protests
against
immigration involving the far right. This paper, however, attempts to
paint a less gloomy and more complex picture of public attitudes towards
immigration and its assumed association with crime and insecurity by
showing how polite and civil social exchange can exist at the local
level of social life.
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