Rees, A., Maxwell, N., Grey, J., Corliss, C., Barton, A., Khan, ., O’Donnell, C., & Silverwood, V. (2019). Final Report for Evaluation of the Fostering Wellbeing Programme
Forrester, D., Manistre, L., Silverwood, V., Westlake, D., & Wallace, S. (2018). Safely reducing the need for children to enter care: telephone interviews with local authorities in England
Silverwood, V. (2019). Not all Violence is Criminal. In James Treadwell, Adam Lynes (Ed.),50 Facts Everyone Should Know about Crime and Punishment in Britain Policy Press
Silverwood, V. (2022). Beyond the Athlete 'Offender' Recontextualising Violence and Harm in the NHL. In Derek Silva, Liam Kennedy (Ed.),Power Played: A Critical Criminology of Sport University of British Columbia Press
Silverwood, V. (2022). Beyond the Athlete 'Offender' Recontextualising Violence and Harm in the NHL. In Derek Silva, Liam Kennedy (Ed.),Power Played: A Critical Criminology of Sport University of British Columbia Press
Silverwood, V. (2019). Not all Violence is Criminal. In James Treadwell, Adam Lynes (Ed.),50 Facts Everyone Should Know about Crime and Punishment in Britain Policy Press
Rees, A., Maxwell, N., Grey, J., Corliss, C., Barton, A., Khan, ., O’Donnell, C., & Silverwood, V. (2019). Final Report for Evaluation of the Fostering Wellbeing Programme
Forrester, D., Manistre, L., Silverwood, V., Westlake, D., & Wallace, S. (2018). Safely reducing the need for children to enter care: telephone interviews with local authorities in England
Tackling gender based abuse in sport: A mixed methods study to establish the extent and nature of gender-based abuse in football and rugby in England and Wales.
(cyfredol)
PhD
Goruchwyliwr arall: Dr Zoe John
Crypto-Asset Related Crimes: Exploiting Opportunities and Exercising Control in Fraud, Ransomware Attacks, and Money Laundering
(dyfarnwyd 2025)
PhD
Goruchwyliwr arall: Dr Kris Stoddart
'Privilege’ in Contemporary Popular and Academic Equality Literature
(cyfredol)
PhD
Goruchwyliwr arall: Dr Steve Garner
Criminal Justice Cultures and Female Sexual Deviance: An Exploration of Female Sexual Offending through Practitioner Identities
(cyfredol)
The module reimagines sport as an important critical criminological field that can help us better understand how discourses and practices of crime and justice produce and reinforce social inequalities. The intersections of sport and crime have received much attention from scholars working predominantly in the areas of law and legal studies. For the most part, this body of research has documented cases of corruption, cheating, and illegal behavior that occurs away from the arena and in contexts that fall outside of the direct purview of sport. Criminologists add to this field by considering how crime, deviance, and punishment in the sporting world produce and reproduce social inequalities.
This course investigates the myriad ways that ideas, representations, and messages about crime, violence, and punishment in sport mirror broader relations of power that exist outside of sport. Covering a broad range of legal, cultural and social issues such as corruption, cheating, drug-use, doping, violence, and power we consider the role of critical criminology in addressing some of the crimes and harms associated with sport and leisure.
ASC339
International Comparative Criminology
This module uses a Collaborative Online International Learning (COIL) framework to promote an understanding of comparative criminology.¿ This module will be taught in collaboration with Trent University and will involve final year Swansea University students partnering with final year Trent University students to examine and participate in the practice of comparative criminology, critically understand the strengths and weaknesses of the methods and practices involved and explore case study examples of comparative criminology.
SPC303
Homicide: Criminalising Death and Dying
`Homicide: Criminalising Death and Dying¿ offers a critical exploration of homicide through a criminological lens. It assesses the cultural and legal parameters of killing by considering what constitutes homicide in contrasting contexts. The module focuses on a variety of forms of homicide, from politically motivated assassinations to corporate neglect and manslaughter. The spatial and temporal dynamics of homicide are examined with reference to debates on abortion and euthanasia. Collectively the lectures enable students to develop a comprehensive knowledge and theoretical understanding of homicide. The module explores homicide as a distinct criminological topic, whilst examining its relationship with criminology and criminal justice more broadly.