Explaining immunisation against violence against the person in Wales and its implications for a narrative approach to evidence-based policy-making

Lead Research Organisation: CARDIFF UNIVERSITY
Department Name: Sch of Social Sciences

Abstract

Explaining immunisation against violence against the person in Wales and its
implications for a narrative approach to evidence-based policymaking.
With this PhD studentship, I would seek to look at evidence-based
policymaking from a different perspective by studying those who are
immunised against violence, even though they may be at risk, rather than
those who are already committing said violence.
During my time as a Research Assistant at the Crime and Security Research
Institute (CSRI) I was responsible for creating an exploratory coding framework
and building a repository for Welsh safeguarding reports - namely Domestic
Homicide, Mental Health Homicide and Adult Practice reviews.
As part of my research, I saw a trend in life patterns where perpetrators and
family members were interviewed as part of the review process. I strongly
believe that this would benefit from further study. There are many in the
periphery of these reviews who are at risk, yet never suffer violence or
perpetrate it themselves. Looking at these alternative narratives can help
reveal 'unknown unknowns' from a policy perspective and can serve to better
inform both policy creation and safeguarding measures.
Although my personal interest is in fatal violence inside the home, I would be
particularly interested to explore issues of non-fatal violence and comorbidity
with this studentship. Often, we see those that are at the centre of domestic
homicide reviews have a record of prior violence that they have perpetrated
outside the home on others (usually Police officers). With mental health
homicide reviews, we see a similar pattern of behaviour - even though every
MHHR is not necessarily domestic in nature, there is often a large overlap that
will see a DHR and an MHHR being commissioned for each offence. There are
also elements of this 'immunisation' against violence in adult practice reviews,
where high risk individuals feature in the narrative of the reports but have not
committed any crimes.
I should like to undertake a mixed-methods approach with this studentship -
using lifetime interviews and focus groups for narrative establishment, with a
strong grounding in secondary data analysis to relate this to what we already
know about interpersonal violence in Wales.

Publications

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Studentship Projects

Project Reference Relationship Related To Start End Student Name
ES/P00069X/1 01/10/2017 30/09/2027
2434445 Studentship ES/P00069X/1 01/10/2020 11/08/2022 Antonia NEEDHAM