Dr Anne-Marie Martindale

Dr Anne-Marie Martindale is a social anthropologist with interests in the negotiation of embodied identities and their wider intersections with health, appearance, and religion across the life course; she is an experienced researcher, lecturer and knowledge exchange and impact specialist.

Professor Sandra Walklate (B.A,. M.Litt., FAcSS) is currently Eleanor Rathbone Chair of Sociology at Liverpool University (UK) conjoint Chair of Criminology at Monash University (Melbourne). My current work focuses on the intersections between violence against women and violent acts of terrorism. I have been working with Prof. Gabe Mythen for over a decade on making sense of radicalization and the threat from terrorism. This work is reflected in her publications.

Over the last two decades, I have been studying the impacts of risk on everyday life across a range of domains, including national security, crime, politics, welfare, work, the environment and consumption. During the course of my career, I have been keen to explore the ways in which social dangers are socially constructed and symbolically represented, how risks are perceived by different cultural groups, the ways in which risks are politically managed and the modes of regulation deployed by government and criminal justice agencies seeking to control risks.

My research lies at the intersection between Sociology and Criminology and is oriented toward the relationship between risk, security and control. In recent years I have been researching the social construction of the terrorist threat and the political effects of counter-terrorism legislation on Muslim Minority groups. This strand of my work is currently being augmented by a critical study into the nature, representation and regulation of radicalization.
I am also working alongside colleagues Sandra Walklate and Ross McGarry on a range of projects exploring the concept of resilience and its applications in military and security contexts. The third strand of my research is oriented toward the changing nature of the victim in society and the relationship between understandings of victimization, fear of crime and wider processes of securitization. My final long-standing research interest revolves around the theoretical uses of risk and the limits to risk theory. Consequent to my critique of the risk society thesis, I continue to explore the possibility of developing inter-disciplinary synergistic theories of risk within the social sciences.

I have established an international reputation in the field of risk research, delivering lectures and papers in Europe, North America, South America, Asia and Oceania. I have authored several books on risk and my work is published in a range of high impact social science journals including the British Journal of Sociology, the British Journal of Criminology, Sociology, Sociological Review and Security Dialogue

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