Clare Stevens
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Justice (ESRC 1+3)
University of Bristol, School of Sociology, Politics and International RelationsStart date: September 2015
Research topic: Cybersecurity
I am currently researching the complex and varied range of actors that are involved in the landscape of cybersecurity. These are not just state or military actors, but also private corporations and individuals, materials, technologies and all sorts of other actants, something which no single theory or framework in international relations or science and technology studies (STS) seems able to address at present. I want to investigate whether an interdisciplinary approach can help conceptualise this landscape more clearly, drawing on IR, security studies, STS and the philosophy of technology amongst others.Research supervisors: Dr John Downer (Bristol), Professor David Galbreath (Bath)
Professional memberships/Positions held:
SWDTC/P 2017 conference committee member; Defence Research Network committee member; Global Insecurities Centre (GIC) member; GIC Security and Technology Working Group member; Faculty Student Quality ReviewerEmail: cs13554@bristol.ac.uk
Emily Clifford
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Justice (ESRC 1+3)
University of Exeter, College of Social Sciences and International StudiesStart date: September 2018
Research topic: Killing, Caring, and Counterinsurgency: French Legacy in the Sahel from a Feminist Perspective.
Research supervisors: Dr Sergio Catignani, Professor Paul Higate
Email: ec385@exeter.ac.uk
Georgina Lewis
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Human Rights (ESRC 1+3)
University of Exeter, College of Social Sciences and International StudiesStart date: September 2018
Research topic: Police Violence Against Refugees: Understanding the Issues of Security, Human Rights and Necropolitics in Calais
My research focus is on the current refugee situation in Calais, addressing primarily the reasons for – and impact of – the police violence towards the refugees. Viewing the situation through a socio-political lens, I will explore the factors surrounding and ‘permitting’ the violence to occur, and what this means for our understanding of human rights and security for refugees. My research will consider the various political dynamics embodied in the situation, and from this evaluate whether a necropolitical theory can be seen to understand the violence and attitudes towards the refugees.Research supervisors: Professor Brian Rappert , Dr Brad Evans
Email: ghl204@exeter.ac.uk
Jade Bloomfield-Utting
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Rights (ESRC +3)
University of Bath, Department of Social and Policy SciencesStart date: October 2019
Research topic: An exploration of the responses of friends, families and partners of victim-survivors during the aftermath of sexual assault and rape.
Two-thirds of disclosures of sexual violence are made to friends, family and partners (informal support network), compared to only 9% disclosing to formal support services. Despite this, the vast majority of research pertaining to sexual violence is conducted within the context of formal disclosures, for instance reporting to the police. In contrast, my research is an exploration of the experiences of victim-survivors of sexual abuse, sexual assault and rape, focusing on the ways in which they were responded to by their informal support network and the impact of the aforementioned responses.Research supervisors: Tina Skinner , Rachel Fenton
Email: jlbu20@bath.ac.uk
Kate Byron
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Justice (ESRC 1+3)
University of Bristol, School for Sociology, Politics and International StudiesStart date: December 2016
Research topic: Exploring the (re)configurations of the human subject in machine learning practices
I use a gendered analytic approach to explore the (re)configurations of the human subject in machine learning practices.Research supervisors: Professor Jutta Weldes , Dr Sam Kinsley
Professional memberships/Positions held:
University of Bristol’s Gender Research CentreUniversity of Bristol’s Global Insecurities Centre
Email: kb1972@bristol.ac.uk
Laura Hankin
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Human Rights (ESRC +3)
University of Bristol, School of Sociology, Politics and International StudiesStart date: September 2017
Research topic: Locality and the (re)construction of identities at the interface of government-led and community social reintegration processes of former FARC-EP combatants in Colombia
My research focuses on the Colombian peace process and the reintegration of the FARC-EP following the signing of the peace agreement with the Colombian government in November 2016. In particular, I tackle the question of identity construction, exploring first how this process is framed and bounded within the institutional discourse of reincorporation, and then how this unfolds in the realities of transitioning to civilian life. I deconstruct the problematic binaries that reintegration so often encourages and frames, and explore how the boundaries of belonging are being reshaped and redrawn so that communities can come together, despite the horrors of war.Research supervisors: Dr Ana Juncos Garcia (Bristol), Dr Peter Manning (Bath)
Professional memberships/Positions held:
Global Insecurities Centre (GIC), University of Bristol,Rodeemos el Diálogo (ReD),
Conflict Research Society (CRS),
International Society for Research on Identity (ISRI)
Email: laura.hankin@bristol.ac.uk
Mary Ryder
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Human Rights (ESRC +3)
University of Bristol, School of Sociology, Politics and International RelationsStart date: October 2019
Research topic: Truth, memory and the drug war: uncovering the conflict narratives of coca farmers in drug producing regions of Colombia
My research explores the role of drugs-related violence and drug policy in Colombia’s transitional justice process, with a focus on historical memory. I consider how counter-drug and security policies have shaped the experiences and memories of armed conflict of rural farmers living in drug-producing regions of Colombia. I hope to explore how these marginalised memories can facilitate dialogue about the root causes of conflict in Colombia and promote peacebuilding.Research supervisors: Dr Julia Paulson, Dr Peter Manning
Email: mr12859@bristol.ac.uk
Twitter: https://twitter.com/maryder93
Nicci Shall
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Justice (ESRC 1+3)
University of Bristol, School for Sociology, Politics and International StudiesStart date: September 2016
Research topic: What are the implications of the ways in which consent is understood by men who have been accused of rape?
Research supervisors: Dr Emma Williamson (Bristol), Dr Charlotte Bishop (Exeter)
Email: ns16795@my.bristol.ac.uk
Nick Dorward
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Human Rights (ESRC 1+3)
University of Bristol, School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies / School of Geographical SciencesStart date: September 2017
Research topic: The political geography of violence in Nigeria: A subnational approach
The objective of my research is to explore and explain subnational variation in violent collective action in Nigeria. Adopting an interdisciplinary theoretical framework drawn from across the social sciences and a mixed methods approach, I aim to investigate how local political factors interact with socioeconomic ones to shape the likelihood and nature of violence in space and time.Research supervisors: Dr Sean Fox, Dr Oliver Walton
Email: nd17631@bristol.ac.uk
Polly Winfield
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Justice (ESRC 1+3)
University of Bath, Department of Social and Policy SciencesStart date: September 2018
Research topic: Between Recognition and Resistance: Controlling the narrative of South African sites of memory
Taking an intersectional approach, considering dimensions of race, space, class, generation and power, and employing a mixed methodology of ethnographic, oral history and community-based participatory action, this research aims to consider the ways in which narratives of memory can be (re)produced, recognised or resisted through the (often competing) structures and patterns of remembering in South Africa. Spatially, the scope of this research will seek to create distinctions between the ways in which such narratives, grounded in social discourse, are mobilised within formal, official spaces aimed at obligating interaction with the past, such as museums and sites of memory, and within informal, quotidian spaces, such as communities, concerned with change for the future.Research supervisors: Dr Peter Manning, Dr Stacey Hynd
Professional memberships/Positions held:
SWDTP TOREmail: paw37@bath.ac.uk
Robynne Grant Jepps
Security, Conflict and Human RightsESRC 1+3
University of Bristol, School of Sociology, Politics and International StudiesStart date: September 2022
Research topic: Pandemics, prejudice, and perceptions of blame: Securitising Covid-19 in South Africa
Broadly speaking, my research examines how the securitisation of infectious disease (re)produces social representations of health and illness that construct certain groups as the ‘Other’. This project situates itself within wider debates as to the scope and relative normative strength of security frameworks within the global health. As a researcher, I am interested in the epistemic value of co-production and seek to incorporate a participatory ethic into this PhD project.Research supervisors: Dr Adrian Flint, Dr Manuela Barreto
Email: pq18150@bristol.ac.uk
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robynne-jepps-6b546a203/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/Roby_nne
Sapphire Oriana Sweetland
Security, Conflict and Human RightsSecurity, Conflict and Human Rights +3
University of Bath September 2021Start date: September 2021
Research topic: Evaluating the impact and effectiveness of the new PSHEE content in schools
My study aims to evaluate the impact and effectiveness of the new PSHEE content in schools surrounding the topics of domestic-abuse and healthy relationships. Whilst the need to include young people in the fight against domestic-abuse has been recognised by the inclusion of this content, the quality and the impact on young people remains unclear without evaluation. My project aims to generate insightful data to analyse any changes in participants’ attitude and knowledge, develop a theory of change to understand the mechanisms of attitudinal change in education surrounding domestic-abuse and make recommendations to enhance the programme and teacher training.Research supervisors: Tina Skinner, Rachel Fenton
Email: ss3224@bath.ac.uk
Sophia Simelitidou
Security, Conflict and Human RightsESRC 1+3
University of Exeter, Department of GeographyStart date: September 2022
Research topic: Privacy vs Protection: The right to private and family life in the EU Immigration and Asylum System and the lived experiences of (LGBTQIA+) asylum seekers
I critically examine the European Asylum and Immigration legal regime with a focus on struggles around privacy and family life. This right is routinely violated during asylum determination, the very process that is designed to afford protection to refugees. As part of this research, I will conduct analysis with ethnographic methods and primarily engage with LGBTQIA+ refugees in Greece, who are often in the precarious position of having to share private information for their claims to be processed. My goals include: assessing the extent of unauthorised breaches of privacy during asylum determination processes, and proposing effective remedies for the future.Research supervisors: Prof. Nick Gill, Prof. Ana Beduschi
Email: ss1458@exeter.ac.uk
LinkedIn: http://linkedin.com/in/sophia-simelitidou-24695675
Sophie Geoghegan-Fittall
Security, Conflict and Human RightsPhD Researcher in Security, Conflict and Human Rights (ESRC +3.3)
University of Bath, Department of Social and Policy StudiesStart date: October 2020
Research topic: An exploration of the police investigative stage of rape cases from the perspectives of victim-survivors and police: understanding the complex interplay of ontogenetic, micro, meso and macro factors and their influence on case progression.
Despite considerable contribution of research, policy reviews, reform attempts, and the introduction of specialist rape investigation units, the criminal justice response to rape remains problematic. There is limited research examining police decision-making in rape cases, despite their role as ‘gatekeepers’ to the CJS. My PhD will explore decision-making from the perspectives of victim-survivors and police officers, to understand:- victim-survivor and police decision-making during police rape investigations and the context within which they occur;
- the relationship between police and victim-survivor decision-making during this stage;
- the interplay between the ecological environment of police and victim-survivors and factors impacting on case progression.
Research supervisors: Dr Tina Skinner (University of Bath), Dr Rachel Fenton (University of Exeter)
Email: sgf34@bath.ac.uk