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This
page contains information about upcoming seminars, conferences,
annual meetings, workshops and calls for papers which
may be of interest to professionals and academics in the
field of criminology and related disciplines. |
Organisations are encouraged to submit information about
events currently being organised, so that we may publicise
them on this page and in our journal, Current
Issues in Criminal Justice.
>If
you would like to be included on our mailing list for
seminar information please email
your details to us.
Recent
Seminar in the Beyond Punishment Series:
'Faith-based
interventions -
the role of religion in corrections'
Thursday
27 March 2008
Sydney University Law School
Religion
and spirituality have long played a central
practical and symbolic role in rehabilitation
and reconciliation and this role has been
highlighted in moves to more restorative
justice processes. The seminar participants
discussed the role of faith-based interventions
in corrections and explored any effects
they may have on such issues as recidivism.
Chair:
Dr Murray Lee, Co-Director, Institute
of Criminology
Commentator:
Associate Professor Eileen Baldry,
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, University
of New South Wales. Eileen is also a spokesperson
for 'Beyond Bars'.
Speakers:
Father Michael Whelan SM,
Principal of the Aquinas Academy in Sydney.
Michael is also the author of numerous books
and journal articles on spirituality and
is the co-founder of 'Spirituality in the
Pub'.
Nada
Roude. Nada has had extensive experience
in working with Arab and Muslim communities.
She is the founder of a number of women's
organisations such as the Muslim Women's
Association, the Arabic Women's Federation
and the first Muslim women's refuge. Nada
currently works as a cross-cultural trainer
and educator.
Judge Chris Geraghty, Judge
of the NSW District Court. Judge Geraghty
was a Catholic priest for 14 years before
he left the priesthood in 1976.
Commentator:
Reverend Rodney Moore,
Chaplaincy Co-ordinator, NSW Department
of Corrective Services.
*A
public seminar in the Beyond Punishment series,
engaging in critical debate about prisons,
community programs and related issues, co-sponsored
by the NSW Department of Corrective Services.
Date:
Thursday, 27 March 2008, 5.30pm - 7.30 pm
Venue: Assembly Hall, Level
4 (entry level), Sydney University Law School,
173-175 Phillip Street, Sydney
Contact Rachel Miller 02 9351 0239 or r.miller@usyd.edu.au
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Recent
Seminars
Understanding the Significance of Sentencing
in International Criminal Justice
Speaker:
Professor Ralph Henham
Professor of Criminal Justice
at Nottingham Law School,
Nottingham Trent University UK
26
February 2008 5.30pm
The
idea that international sentencing might be instrumental
in helping to promote reconciliation and peace in societies
ravaged by war or social conflict is superficially attractive.
However, beyond the political rhetoric of international
relations it is difficult to visualise exactly what
this might mean, except in purely abstract terms. The
problem stems from the fact that our perceptions of
'international criminal justice' are relative and contextual,
so that it appears futile to argue that it has some
kind of instrumental force having significance at both
the international and local level. However, this is
exactly what we, as individuals and citizens, are led
to believe. The structures purporting to deliver 'international
criminal justice' and the values it represents are depicted
as universally relevant and its outcomes applicable
wherever international crimes are alleged to have been
committed, irrespective of context.
In
order to deconstruct this myth Professor Henham highlights
some of the problems which afflict sentencing in international
criminal trials, and goes on to suggest that there are
several obstacles which appear to hamper the notion
that 'international penality' as currently conceived
might be viewed as an instrumental force for achieving
'justice'. This evaluation acts as a precursor to a
tentative analysis of its ability to function as an
elemental component of international criminal justice
governance, especially in terms of its capacity to fulfil
the mandate of achieving 'justice' so often attributed
to it.
Tuesday
26 February 5.30-6.30pm
Minter Ellison Conference Room, Level
13,
University of Sydney Law School 173-175 Phillip Street
Sydney
SUPERMAX
: Past and Present
Wednesday
24 October 2007
Sydney University Law School
Port
Arthur, Norfolk Island, Jika Jika, Goulbourn
- in the long and dark history of Australian
corrections names like these are associated
with prisons where the "worst of the
worst" of the nation's criminals have
been housed.
At
the seminar the
latest addition to the Institute of Criminology
Series, Imprisoning Resistance - Life
and Death in an Australian Supermax
by Bree Carlton, was released.
Speakers:
Carol
Berry Health Solicitor, Public Interest
Advocacy Centre
Carol's research into supermax prisons focuses
on a number of issues, such as the prevalence
of mental illness in prison, the quality of
treatment currently available for the mentally
ill in prison, and the status of "forensic
patients", who are generally those found
not guilty on the grounds of mental illness
within the corrections system.
Michael Walton NSW Council
for Civil Liberties
Michael Walton is the author of the NSW Council
for Civil Liberties' recent Shadow Report to
the UN Committee against Torture. The Shadow
Report recommended that the Special Rapporteur
on Torture visit the High Risk Management Unit
at Goulburn to investigate recurring complaints
of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or
punishment.
Bernie Matthews Author of Intractable
Bernie Matthews is a convicted bank robber and
prison escapee who has served time for armed
robbery and prison escapes in NSW (1969-1980)
and Queensland (1996-2000). During his period
of incarceration Bernie Matthews studied journalism
and received scholarships to study as an external
student at the University of Southern Queensland.
He is the author of the award winning stories
The Crime and Prison Movie Genre Showcase
Only Rare True Success and Abuse Within
Prisons makes Prisoners More Violent Upon Release.
Commentator
Professor David Brown teaches criminal
justice courses at the University of New South
Wales Faculty of Law. He has written extensively
on prisons and criminal law.
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The Beyond Punishment
Seminar Series |
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This
Series engages in critical debate about prisons, community
programs and related issus. Co-sponsored by the NSW
Department of Corrective Services.
For
information on past seminars in the series see the
Beyond
Punishment Series page.
.
For
further information contact Rachel Miller at r.miller@usyd.edu.au
or 02 9351 0239.
Recent
Conference
Australasian
Teaching Critical
Criminology Conference
Friday
13 July 2007
Hosted
by the University of Sydney Institute of Criminology
and the University of NSW Crime and Justice
Research Network
Speakers:
•
Professor J Pratt, Victoria University (NZ)
• Professor Mark Findlay, University of
Sydney
• Professor David Brown, University of
NSW
• Professor Chris Cunneen, University
of NSW
• Professor Julie Stubbs, University of
Sydney
• Dr Mark Halsey, University of Melbourne
• Associate Professor Jude McCulloch,
Monash University
• Dr Bree Carlton, Monash University
•
Dorothea Anthony, UTS
•
Mike Grewcock, UNSW
• Elizabeth Stanley, Victoria University
(NZ)
• Dr B Hocking, QUT
• Dr Scott Guy, Griffith University
Click
here for Conference Program
Click
here for abstracts and bios
This
is the first Australasian Critical Criminology
conference. It provides a forum for criminologists
who analyse the sociological and ideological
functions of the criminal justice system. In
particular, it aims to bring together academics,
researchers, teachers and students to consider
new directions in teaching Critical Criminology.
The conference draws on recent research in a
broad range of theoretical and applied criminologies.
It delves into basic concepts of critical criminology
that displace orthodox approaches to crime and
its methodologies and crime and notions of harm,
morality and psychology. It presents work on
state crime and issues of torture, genocide
and refugees. It covers law and order ideologies
as they relate to policing and imprisonment
and engages alternative approaches to restorative
justice in the domestic and the international
criminal justice contexts.
Internationally
renowned criminologists presented papers that
highlight the role of research-led teaching.
It drew on current issues and dynamic case studies
that cross a broad range of criminology courses
in Australasia.
Held
at University of Sydney Law School
173-175 Phillip Street, Sydney
Contact
for general inquiries, Institute of Criminology
law.criminology@usyd.edu.au
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Recent
Seminars
Aboriginal-Focused
Correctional Centres,
15 August 2007
Compulsory
Drug Treatment Orders,
9 May 2007
What
is a Crime?, 4 April 2007
Criminal
Regulation of Property Relations, 3
April 2007
Masters
of Fact and Law? A Place for Juries in Sentencing
4 October 2006
The
legal system's response to sexual assault
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Do specialist courts offer the best way forward?
5 Sept 2006
Australians
and the Death Penalty: National and International Dimensions,
7 June 2006
| Previous
Seminars and Events |
A
complete list of previous seminars is available.
Previous seminar topics include: women's human rights; Juvenile
Justice; Mental Health and the Criminal Justice System; Refugees
and Race; Homelessness and Criminal Justice; Truth & Reconciliation;
Ethnicity & Crime and the Use of DNA in the Criminal Justice
System.
Papers
are available for many of these seminars.
The
Law Faculty at the University of Sydney runs events
and seminars
The
Australian Institute of Criminology, Canberra
website contains conference
and seminar information
Crime
and Justice Research Network (UNSW), events
Regulatory
Institutions Network (RegNet): current
events
Jury
Research and Practice Conference,
11 December 2007, Parliament House,
Macquarie Street, Sydney, NSW, Registration
Form
Engendering
Leadership' Conference,
22-24 July 2008, The University of Western Australia, website
Young
People, Crime and Community Safety: engagement and early intervention
Conference, 25-26 February 2008, website
Criminology:
linking theory, policy and practice - 21st annual conference
of the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology,
25-28 November 2008, Canberra, website
The
Criminal Pursuit: Thinking about crime across the disciplines,
An Interdisciplinary Postgraduate Conference, 28
November 2007, website
The
American Society of Criminology website contains
international conference and seminar information
AMERICAN
SOCIETY OF CRIMINOLOGY, Annual Meeting 2007, Atlanta,
Georgia, November 14-17, Atlanta Marriott Marquis, CRIME AND
JUSTICE: IN THE GLOBAL AND IN THE LOCAL, website
15th
World Congress of Criminology, 20-25 July 2008, Barcelona,
Spain, website
Invisibilities:
The Politics, Practice and Experience of Surveillance in Everyday
Life, International Conference hosted by The Centre
of Criminological Research, University of Sheffield in association
with The Surveillance Studies Network, 2-3 April 2008, website
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