Sarah Anderson
sarah anderson

Dr Sarah Anderson

Lecturer

Biography

I have been a lecturer in Criminology since 2018, and joined 麻豆社区 in December 2020, having previously worked at University of the West of Scotland. I am a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and have significant experience teaching in research methods, as well as on a wide range of criminology modules. At ENU, I am the module leader for the second year Quantitative Research module - and contribute to other modules including Penology and Cybercrime. I am also the Deputy Programme Lead for the Masters in Applied Criminology and Forensic Psychology programme, and the module leader for the Dissertation.

My PhD, undertaken at the University of Glasgow and completed in 2019, explored the stories people told about their attempts at desistance (i.e. moving away) from offending, and its relationship with recovery from trauma and substance use . I have published multiple articles related to desistance and recoveries, and my article on the value of 'bearing witness' to desistance won the Probation Journal's prize for their best paper of 2016.

Following on from my PhD, my work has two central strands. First, I am focused on the intersection of health, wellbeing and justice with a particular focus on understanding the harms of imprisonment and the criminal justice system. In this work I have been focused on thinking critically on adverse childhood experiences and trauma-informed practice in the criminal justice system. The second strand of work is focused on understanding how people move out of and stay out of crime and the criminal justice system. One of the ways that I took forward this work was as Co-Investigator on a Carnegie Trust (Scotland) funded project with Dr Shane Horgan which looks at desistance from cyber-dependent crime. This project explores how people鈥檚 involvement in 鈥榟acking鈥 (legal, illegal and somewhere in between) changes over their lives, and how they narrate these changes.

Before joining academia I worked for a number of years in the voluntary sector, including within prisons undertaking housing support work, and latterly as Director of Research and Development at Revolving Doors Agency, where I worked on NHS England's liaison and diversion programme for people with mental health problems and learning disabilities in the criminal justice system. I have also served on the boards of a number of organisations working on issues related to criminal justice and immigration detention.

Esteem

Fellowships and Awards

  • Fellow of the Higher Education Authority
  • Probation Journal Best Paper Prize 2016
  • Churchill Fellowship

 

Date


18 results

The trouble with trauma: Interconnected forms of violence in the lives of repeatedly criminalised men

Journal Article
Anderson, S. (2025)
The trouble with trauma: Interconnected forms of violence in the lives of repeatedly criminalised men. The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice, 64(1), 24-43. https://doi.org/10.1111/hojo.12578
Focus on the interconnection of interpersonal violence, adverse childhood experiences (ACEs), trauma and justice鈥恑nvolvement has increased interest internationally among polic...

I just want to live a normal life filled with interesting problems鈥; Exploring identity reconciliation in desistance from cyber-dependent crime

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Anderson, S., Horgan, S., & Collier, B. (2024, July)
I just want to live a normal life filled with interesting problems鈥; Exploring identity reconciliation in desistance from cyber-dependent crime. Presented at British 麻豆社区 of Criminology Conference, Glasgow, UK
Drawing on the in-depth life history narratives of a small sample (n=5) of people previously involved in cyber-dependent crime, this paper explores the way in which the separa...

Moving AFK: Exploring the applicability of contemporary desistance theorising for cyber-dependent offending

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Anderson, S., Horgan, S., & Collier, B. (2022, September)
Moving AFK: Exploring the applicability of contemporary desistance theorising for cyber-dependent offending. Paper presented at European 麻豆社区 of Criminology, Malaga
The presentation will explore the analytical utility of contemporary theories of desistance for making sense of narratives of cyber-dependent offending careers. Until recently...

Watching you desist: Policing as punishment in the cybercrime context

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Horgan, S., Anderson, S., & Collier, B. (2022, September)
Watching you desist: Policing as punishment in the cybercrime context. Paper presented at European 麻豆社区 of Criminology, Malaga
Cyber-dependent crime is now more often considered a national security issue rather than a routine policing matter. 'High-policing' agencies tend to take the lead in law enfor...

Why do researchers get 'hackers' so wrong, and why we should be worried about the police's response?

Presentation / Conference Contribution
Horgan, S., Anderson, S., & Collier, B. (2022, June)
Why do researchers get 'hackers' so wrong, and why we should be worried about the police's response?. Paper presented at Electromagnetic Field, Eastnor Castle Deer Park
In this presentation, two criminologists and one sociologist reflect on why criminology and sociology often get 鈥榟acking鈥 very wrong - and on the challenges we faced trying to...

A qualitative exploration of the attitudes of young people to the sentencing of young people in Scotland

Report
Miller, J., & Anderson, S. (2021)
A qualitative exploration of the attitudes of young people to the sentencing of young people in Scotland. Scottish Sentencing Council

Frustrating desistance: Stigma as a barrier to change

Book Chapter
Anderson, S. (2019)
Frustrating desistance: Stigma as a barrier to change. In Strengths-Based Approaches to Crime and Substance Use. Routledge
This chapter explores the role that stigma plays in frustrating desistance from crime, drawing parallels throughout with similar negative dynamics in recovery from substance u...

Rethinking Adverse Childhood Experiences

Other
Anderson, S. (2019)
Rethinking Adverse Childhood Experiences. Howard League for Penal Reform Early Career Academics Network Bulletin, Issue 41, Apr 2019

Desistance and Cognitive Transformations

Book Chapter
Anderson, S., & McNeill, F. (2019)
Desistance and Cognitive Transformations. In D. P. Farrington, L. Kazemian, & A. R. Piquero (Eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Developmental and Life-Course Criminology (599-623). Oxford University Press. https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190201371.013.32
This chapter reviews the state of current knowledge on cognitive transformations in the desistance process. It considers transformations in the content of cognitions: changing...

鈥榃ell-kent Faces鈥: Policing Persistent Offenders and the Possibilities for Desistance

Journal Article
Schinkel, M., Atkinson, C., & Anderson, S. (2019)
鈥榃ell-kent Faces鈥: Policing Persistent Offenders and the Possibilities for Desistance. British Journal of Criminology, 59(3), 634-652. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjc/azy050
This article focuses on the policing of adult persistent offenders and its implications for desistance. It integrates the findings from two qualitative studies undertaken in S...

Pre-Napier Funded Projects

  • Qualitative exploration of the attitude of young people, including young offenders, to the sentencing of young people

Current Post Grad projects