14 episodes

Stories of justice from the people who make it. Brought to you by the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research.

Just Humans SCCJR

    • Society & Culture

Stories of justice from the people who make it. Brought to you by the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research.

    Are you Listening? Shining a Light on Domestic Abuse in Scotland

    Are you Listening? Shining a Light on Domestic Abuse in Scotland

    Dr Emma Forbes joins us in this episode to describe her extraordinary project GlassWalls which uses the medium of stained glass to shine a light on domestic abuse in Scotland.
    Emma talks to Rachelle Cobain about each of the glass panels and the stories they tell us about victim/survivors and how law and society has viewed domestic abuse over the last few decades.
    The panels are part of a collaboration between the women at the Daisy Project in Glasgow along with Charles Provan and Brian Waugh from Wasps Studios.
    You can see photographs of all the panels on the GlassWalls website https://glasswallsart.com/
    The Daisy Project provides domestic abuse advocacy and support https://thedaisyproject.org.uk/
    With special thanks to Jo Mango and the women of the Daisy Project who wrote the song ‘Are you Listening?’ which is played at the end of the episode.
    Hosted/Produced/Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR
    Follow us on Twitter via: @RachelleCobain @Emma_E_Forbes @Glasswalls3
    Intro music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research website: www.sccjr.ac.uk and follow @TheSCCJR on Twitter & Instagram

    • 34 min
    Letters from Prison: An Exploration of Isolation

    Letters from Prison: An Exploration of Isolation

    Former solicitor and now PhD student Deborah Russo intended her research into segregation in Scottish prisons to begin with a series of in-person interviews, but as Covid hit in 2020 she quickly had to devise an alternative plan.
    Over the last year she has been working on a written correspondence project which has seen her amass more than 150 letters from people in prison, detailing personal accounts of their experiences of isolation, the physical and psychological toll it has taken on them, and the ways in which they seek to cope with life inside.
    Deborah found that as these letters left the prison cell and went beyond the gates they acted as a bridge between the prisoner and the researcher, leading to a much more powerful, personal, and often cathartic exchange.
    “In the mind of the participant it must mean something; that [the letter] moves away from the carceral space and perhaps it’s a way for the mind to become freer,” Deborah tells our host Rachelle Cobain.
    Deborah gives listeners an incredibly moving insight into the minds of those isolated in prison, left without connection or meaningful human contact.  
    *Advisory: Please be aware that at around the 17-minute mark the conversation contains some adult sexual references.
     
    Hosted/Produced/Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR
    Follow us on Twitter via: @RachelleCobain @russo_dea
    Music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research website: www.sccjr.ac.uk and follow @TheSCCJR on Twitter & Instagram

    • 32 min
    Teejay & Mary: Two Tales of Supervision

    Teejay & Mary: Two Tales of Supervision

    Fergus McNeill, who is a Professor of Criminology and Social Work at the University of Glasgow, started his career as a criminal justice social worker before entering the world of academia in the late 90’s. Since then, much of his work has focused on how we punish, rehabilitate and reintegrate people into the community after they’ve offended.
    In this episode we talk about how two very different encounters Fergus has had during his career – one with a man we’re calling Teejay and another with Mary – had a profound and enduring impact on his research and his perception of supervision.
    As Fergus uses song writing and photography to both engage and collaborate with Teejay, we also look at the role art has played in helping him understand people with lived experiences and how it has provided a degree of proximity to his research participants.
    Pervasive Punishment: Making Sense of Mass Supervision (2018) Emerald Publishing is available here.
    McNeill, F. (2018) ‘Mass supervision, misrecognition and the Malopticon’, Punishment and Society, first published January 29, 2018, https://doi.org/10.1177/1462474518755137 An open access version can be found here: http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/154645/
    The song played at the end of the episode is called Blankface which featured on the Vox Liminis Seen and Heard EP. Written by Teejay with Fergus McNeill. Performed by: Louis Abbott, Donna Maciocia and Tom Gibbs. Recorded and produced by Louis Abbott
     
    Just Humans is Hosted/Produced/Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR
    Follow us on Twitter @RachelleCobain @fergus_mcneill
    Intro music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research website: www.sccjr.ac.uk and follow @TheSCCJR on Twitter & Instagram

    • 55 min
    Punishment & Protection: The Paradox of Sex Work in Scotland

    Punishment & Protection: The Paradox of Sex Work in Scotland

    Since completing her PhD thesis, Dr Anastacia Elle Ryan has spent the last ten years working as a researcher, advocate and social entrepreneur promoting the rights of sex workers and criminalised women in Scotland and further afield. 
    Anastacia founded a charity which aimed to remove the stigma often associated with sex work and provided support and services that improved the lives of hundreds of women across Scotland.
    In this final episode of the season, Anastacia talks to Rachelle Cobain about the social and legal position of sex work, how decriminalisation may have a positive impact on workers in Scotland and why she decided to turn her academic studies into activism and advocacy. 
    The Charity, SISU, is being relaunched soon, follow updates on Twitter @SISU_UK
    Hosted/Produced/Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR
    Follow us on Twitter @RachelleCobain @AnastaciaRyan
    Music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research website: www.sccjr.ac.uk and follow @TheSCCJR on Twitter & Instagram
     

    • 52 min
    Family: Dr Cara Jardine

    Family: Dr Cara Jardine

    Family: Dr Cara Jardine  
    Our colleague, or should that be 'sister' of SCCJR, Dr Cara Jardine, Senior Lecturer at the University of Strathclyde, joins our host Ali Fraser to help kick off Season 2 of the Just Humans podcast. 
    Cara's research focuses on the impact of imprisonment on family and relationships and recently published her book, 'Families, Imprisonment and Legitimacy: The Cost of Custodial Penalties'. 
    Cara and Ali talk about family as a verb, what prisons can do to help families connect and we hear Sophie's story who is a young mum trying to keep her family together while Kian is in prison.
    Hosted Dr Alistair Fraser, Director of SCCJR 
    Produced & Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR.
    Follow Cara on twitter via: @Cara_J_Says
    Music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit our website: www.sccjr.ac.uk or follow us on Twitter @TheSCCJR

    • 30 min
    Friends: Dr Lisa Bradley and Dr Nughmana Mirza

    Friends: Dr Lisa Bradley and Dr Nughmana Mirza

    Friends: Dr Lisa Bradley and Dr Nughmana Mirza
    SCCJR besties Lisa and Nughmana first met when doing their PhD's at the University of Glasgow and soon found they had a lot in common; their research interests, having busy home lives with young kids, wanting to do academia differently and a shared love of chatting over cake and coffee.
    Soon their conversation sparked deep connection and collaboration. 
    In this episode of Just Humans we look at how friendship can be viewed as a radical act within the academy and examine the ways in which it may enrich research and the people who make it. 
    Since recording Dr Lisa Bradley is now a Lecturer in Creative and Interdisciplinary Studies in Education and Dr Nughmana Mirza is a Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Glasgow. 
    Researchers Don’t Cry?! https://researchersdontcry.wordpress.com

    Diversifying Justice https://diversifyingjustice.com

    Hosted by Dr Alistair Fraser, Director of the Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research (SCCJR). 
    Produced & Edited by Rachelle Cobain, Communications Officer at SCCJR.
    Music: ‘Rewind’ by Donna Maciocia and Sean H available to download from the Distant Voices EP ‘Looking at Colours Again’.
    Visit our website: www.sccjr.ac.uk or follow us on Twitter @TheSCCJR

    • 28 min

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