The Centre is delighted to announce that Kelly Hannah-Moffat has been appointed
as the Centre’s new director, starting July 1, 2013.
Professor Kelly Hannah-Moffat, who has a PhD from the Centre, is
currently Vice-Dean Undergraduate at the University of Toronto in Mississauga
(UTM); she was previously chair of Sociology at UTM, and has been cross
appointed to the Centre of Criminology and Sociolegal Studies for many years.
She is active in the Law and Society Association as well as the American
Society of Criminology. She is member of the Editorial Advisory Board for
Punishment and Society, British Journal of Criminology, Theoretical
Criminology, and Canadian Journal of Criminology.
While
doing her PhD, Kelly worked as a policy advisor for Madame Justice Arbour on
the Commission of Inquiry into Certain Events at the Prison for Women in Kingston; she was also
the President of the Toronto Elizabeth Fry Society. In 2001, she received the
Radzinowicz Memorial Prize for the best article in published in the British
Journal of Criminology. She is the author of one influential book about women’s
imprisonment, Punishment in Disguise, co-editor of Gendered Risks (with Pat O’Malley)
and author of numerous articles on parole, risk, gender, and social justice and
punishment. Her current national SSHRC project
(with P. Maurutto) examines specialized courts (domestic violence,
Aboriginal, community/wellness and drug courts) and how legal practices such as
bail, sentencing, and case processing have collectively changed as a
consequence of the hybrid approaches used in these courts.
Outgoing director Professor Mariana Valverde will be on leave for one
year, and will be working on three major projects. One is a theoretical book on
spatiotemporal scales in law, tentatively entitled Chronotopes of Law (to be
published by Routledge UK).
Together with three colleagues, she has also started work on a SSHRC-funded
empirical project on public-private partnerships in local governance (in the
Greater Toronto area), for which she is the PI. And she hopes to have time to
finally read the pile of urban history books that form much of the material for
the long-delayed SSHRC-funded historical sociology project on the legal tools
used in major global-North cities to separate ‘good’ from ‘bad’ neighbourhoods.
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