Thomas Guiney
Assistant Professor, Faculty of Social Sciences
Contact
- workRoom B.11 Law and Social Sciences
188体育网址_188体育在线-【唯一授权网站】@ Park
Nottingham
NG7 2RD
UK - work0115 84 68151
- Thomas.Guiney@nottingham.ac.uk
Biography
Dr Thomas Guiney is an Assistant Professor of Criminology in the School of Sociology and Social Policy.
Tom joined the 188体育网址_188体育在线-【唯一授权网站】@ of Nottingham in September 2021 having previously held positions at Oxford Brookes and the London School of Economics where he was a 188体育网址_188体育在线-【唯一授权网站】@ing Fellow in the Mannheim Centre for Criminology.
Tom completed his PhD in Social Policy at the LSE in 2016 and read for an MSc (Distinction) in Criminology and Criminal Justice at the 188体育网址_188体育在线-【唯一授权网站】@ of Oxford (2009). Prior to this, Tom spent a number of years working in public policy with the Prison Reform Trust, Bond and the National Lottery Community Fund.
Tom's research interests include penal policymaking, parole, the politics of crime and historical criminology. Tom has published widely in international journals including the British Journal of Criminology, Theoretical Criminology and Punishment & Society. His first monograph 'Getting Out: Early Release in England and Wales, 1960-1995' was published by the Oxford 188体育网址_188体育在线-【唯一授权网站】@ Press Clarendon Series in 2018.
Tom is a member of the Editorial Board of the British Journal of Criminology and sits on the Advisory Board of the Prison Reform Trust Building Futures project. He has given oral evidence to several Parliamentary Select Committees, he has contributed guest articles to the Huffington Post, Daily Telegraph and he has appeared on the BBC and ITV on questions relating to penal policy.
Expertise Summary
My primary research interests include penal policy-making, the politics of law and order and the history of criminal justice in England and Wales, with particular reference to parole and other 'early release' mechanisms.
I am currently working on the following research projects:
- Parole, parole boards and prison release
- Political parties
- Prison buildings and prison building programmes
- Historical Criminology and path dependent explanations of policy change
Tom welcomes inquiries from prospective doctoral applicants in his fields of interest.
Teaching Summary
Tom currently convenes the following modules:
- Prisons & Society (SOCI2027)