Elizabeth StanleyAuthor
Professor Elizabeth Stanley is an internationally recognised scholar in the areas of state crime, human rights, incarceration, and social justice. Her work is highly regarded for its originality, quality, and social impact. Her books include: Human Rights and Incarceration (edited collection, Palgrave, 2018); State Crime and Resistance (edited collection, Routledge, 2013); and Torture, Truth and Justice (Routledge, 2009). Her monograph The Road to Hell (Auckland University Press, 2016) contributed to the 2018 establishment of a Royal Commission into Abuse in Care in New Zealand.
Dr Trevor Bradley is a senior lecturer at the Institute of Criminology, Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington, where he teaches courses on policing and crime prevention. His ongoing programme of research focuses on plural policing in Aotearoa New Zealand, which incorporates private policing, security, and various citizen-led policing bodies. Recent projects have included an international research collaboration on intelligence-led policing, as well as work on volunteer community policing in New Zealand.
Dr Sarah Monod de Froideville is a lecturer at the Institute of Criminology, Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington. Her current research is broadly centred on harms to the environment in the New Zealand context, with a specific focus on (1) water-related harms and water security, (2) historical pollution, and (3) exploitative human-animal relations embedded into contemporary New Zealand culture. She also has an ongoing interest in the intersections between media representations, crime, and youth justice, stemming from her past work on moral panics in relation to young people.