Hunter M. Boehme, PhD, is an assistant professor and Juvenile Justice Faculty Fellow in the Department of Criminal Justice at North Carolina Central University. His research focuses on extremism/hate crimes, police use of force, and geospatial crime analysis.
David Calnitsky is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Western Ontario. His research interests include poverty, social policy, and social theory, and his research has been published in Socio-economic Review, Sociological Theory, Social Problems, Catalyst, Sociology Compass, Canadian Review of Sociology, Canadian Journal of Sociology, Contexts, and Social Science History.
Deanna Cann is a PhD candidate in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South Carolina. Her research interests focus on critical criminology, race and justice, law, and criminal justice policy.
James Jardine Foley received his PhD from the University of Edinburgh and is currently a lecturer in politics at Glasgow Caledonian University. His research focuses on how nationalism interacts with the crisis of neoliberal globalization. He has authored a book on Scottish independence and has two forthcoming books on the European Union and the breakup of Britain.
Deena A. Isom is an associate professor in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice and African American Studies Program at the University of South Carolina. She received her PhD from Emory University in 2015. Her scholarly agenda broadly aims to bring marginalized and oft-forgotten experiences and voices forefront in the understanding of criminal behavior and contact with the justice system, as well as policy and institutional impacts, to promote equity and inform socially just change. Her work has appeared in the Journal of Criminal Justice, Youth & Society, Journal of Contemporary Criminal Justice, Race and Justice, Victims & Offenders, and Deviant Behavior.
Yair Kaldor received his PhD from the University of Wisconsin–Madison and is currently a postdoctoral researcher at the University of Haifa. His research focuses on the intersections of finance, class, and political power. His current project examines the rise of financial securities as a dominant form of private property, the legal and regulatory ‘infrastructure’ that underlies this development, and its impact on class relations and income inequality in recent decades.
Christian Maravelias is a professor of organization studies at the Department of Business Studies, Stockholm University. He is interested in how neoliberalism transforms the government of health, illness, and disability and, in that connection, the principles of inclusion and exclusion in labor markets.
Thabiso Moyo is a PhD candidate in the Department of Sociology at the University of the Witwatersrand. His PhD research is focused on the history and politics of community advice offices in South Africa.
Maria Charlotte Rast is a PhD candidate at the Sociology Department of Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam. Her research focuses on the challenges and opportunities for promoting refugees’ societal inclusion through engaged scholarship. This research is affiliated with the Refugee Academy of Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Prof. Dr. Halleh Ghorashi’s VICI research project Engaged Scholarship and Narratives of Change.
Ben Scully is a senior lecturer in the Department of Sociology at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg (Wits), South Africa. He also serves as an editor of the Global Labour Journal. His research focuses on labor, social protection, and development in Africa.
Steven Tuttle, PhD, is a postdoctoral scholar at the Indiana Communities Institute at Ball State University. His research focuses on communities, gentrification, issues of race and space, and urban inequality. His work has appeared in City & Community and American Behavioral Scientist (forthcoming).
Amber Wilson is a PhD candidate in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at the University of South Carolina. Her research interests include institutional and community corrections and the intersections of class, race, and gender for justice-involved adults and criminal justice practitioners.