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Competition - Free conference place @ Being There: Ethnography and the Study of Policing

A conference titled "Being There: Ethnography and the Study of Policing" is scheduled to be held on 18-19 January 2018 at the University of Liverpool. There is one free place to giveaway for this conference. The organizers have very generously donated a free place specifically for a BSC member. The conference is very affordable for anyone not winning. To enter, please email info@britsoccrim.org with ‘Conference Draw – Policing’ in the subject line by Sunday, 26 November 2017.

Organised by the Police Ethnography Research Collaboration with the International Criminological Research Unit, this will be an opportunity for dialogue about the value of ethnographic approaches for enhancing our understanding of policing. Abstracts for contributions are also welcomed before the abstract deadline: Monday, 27 November 2017. For more information and registration details see.


British Society of Criminology Conference: Transforming Criminology: Rethinking Crime in a Changing World

The 2018 British Society of Criminology annual conference will be held in Birmingham, UK. Hosted by Birmingham City University the conference will take place on 3-6 July 2018. This year, the theme of the conference is "Transforming Criminology: Rethinking Crime in a Changing World". Save the date!


Professor Scott Decker to kick off Mannheim Centre Seminar Series 2017-2018

Professor Scott Decker will be speaking about "The Promise of Ethnography: Gangs, Active Offenders and Policy" on 11 October 2017. For further details please see:

Mannheim Centre Seminar Series 2017-2018

Wed 04 Oct 2017, 10:15 | Tags: Conference, Criminal Justice, Criminology

Professor Jacqueline S. Hodgson presents paper at conference of the European Society of Criminology 2017

The 17th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology is currently being held in Cardiff, UK. In today's session, Professor Jacqueline S. Hodgson of the Warwick's Criminal Justice Centre presented a paper titled "The CCRC, the applicant and her lawyer: a disruption of procedural models".

Thu 14 Sep 2017, 18:16 | Tags: Conference, Public engagement, Publication

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