Yolande Burgin. A criminologist, she has worked in academic institutions, for the Home Office, and has worked on reforming criminal justice policy as it relates to young people. Yolande was Chair of Release, the oldest drugs advice and information charity in the UK, a magistrate in one of the busiest courts in London, and Director of the Independent Inquiry Into Drug Testing at Work. Yolande has opened an art gallery in Shoreditch, presently showing the work of two iconic photographers, is undertaking a BA in Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design, and makes video art.
Peter Francis. Head of Division, Visual Art, Northumbria University, and Trustee at the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies.
Penny Green. Professor of Law and Criminology, King's College London. Professor Green teaches modules in State Crime and Terrorism and Critical Approaches to Terrorism and State Violenceon the MA Criminology and Criminal Justice and undergraduate Criminology.
Nic Groombridge. He is a Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Media Arts at St Mary's University College, Twickenham. He teaches modules in crime, criminal justice and crime and media but also in magazines, culture and society. Though an ex-employee of the Home Office he sees himself as a critical and sometimes cultured criminologist. His favourite film Rear Window features crime and photographs and notes that some of the earliest users of the camera were police and Lombrosian criminology.
Mark Haworth-Booth. Visiting Professor of Photography, University of the Arts London.
Tom Hunter. Senior Research Fellow, Research Centre at the London College of Communication, University of the Arts London. Tom is also a photographer, known for his images of urban life and ordinary people, often considered social `outsiders', with influences ranging from Thomas Hardy and old master paintings to the Hackney Gazette.
Ken Loach. Having studied law and worked in the theatre and the BBC, Ken has had a long and distinguished directing films for television and the cinema, from Cathy Come Home and Kes in the sixties to Land And Freedom, Sweet Sixteen and The Wind That Shakes The Barley in recent years.
Tamsin O'Hanlon. Founder of Free Range, Europe's largest showcase of graduate art, design and photography. Now in its eighth year, the showcase annually features over 3,000 of the UK's leading graduate artists drawn from the UK's finest art colleges and is dedicated to providing a National platform for the very best in UK student talent.
Simon Pemberton, School of Social Sciences, University of Bristol.
Val Williams. Director of University of the Arts London Research Centre for Photography and the Archive at London College of Communication.
Dave Whyte. He is Reader in Sociology at the University of Liverpool where he teaches and researches various aspects of state and corporate crime. He is co-author of the What is crime? briefing A crisis of enforcement?
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