Workshop Resources
Day One
//
24 May 2022
Introduction and Welcome
Dr Meg Foster
(History, Newnham College, University of Cambridge)
// Session 1B //
Co-creating history: family history and imperial legacies
Assoc. Prof. Tanya Evans
(History, Macquarie University)
Dr Aoife O’Connor
(History, University of Sheffield)
// Session 2A //
Outreach into prisons and constructing a “usable past” of Guyana’s prisons
Prof. Clare Anderson
(History, University of Leicester)
and members of the MNS disorders in Guyana’s Gaols (ESRC-funded) team
Dr. Kellie Moss
(History and Criminology, University of Leicester)
// Session 2B //
Using digital collage as an artistic research output
‘Ways of seeing the penal colony’
Dr Claire Reddleman
(Digital Humanities, University of Manchester)
// Session 3A //
The wider punitive effect:
mapping the contours of race, rehabilitation and harm in early modern British penal reform
Dr Esmorie Miller
(Criminology, London South Bank University)
Day Two
//
25 May 2022
Introduction and Welcome
Dr Katy Roscoe
(Criminology, University of Liverpool)
// Session 4A //
Museums, material culture and imperial legacies of crime
Alice Procter
(Uncomfortable Art Tours, London)
// Session 4B //
Crowdsourcing digital crime history
Dr Alana Piper
(Australian Centre for Public History, University of Technology, Sydney)
// Session 5A //
Longitudinal data and convict history
Prof. Hamish Maxwell-Stewart
(History, University of New England)
Prof. Kris Inwood
(History, University of Guelph)
Prof. Barry Godfrey
(Criminology, University of Liverpool)
// Session 5B //
The ethics of archival engagement:
building new frameworks and practices
Assistant Prof. Kate Bruce-Lockhart
(History, University of Waterloo, Canada)