Kate West

photo of Kate West

DPhil Criminology

 

My doctoral research is supervised by Mary Bosworth. It explores the ways in which pictorial representation is implicated in the (re)production and perceptions of the criminal legal subject. I am most grateful for financial assistance from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) who have kindly offered to support this research under a 1+3 studentship.

Before beginning my DPhil, I received an LLB from the University of Edinburgh (with First Class Honours) where I was awarded the Derrick McClintock Prize (best performance in Criminology Honours), and an MSc from the University of Oxford (with Distinction) where I was awarded the Routledge Criminology Prize (best performance on the MSc).

My wider research interests include the distinction between empathy and sympathy and its inconsistent application in criminal-legal and criminological theorising. I am also interested in the concept of the criminal trial as a civic tragedy and, more generally, moral philosophy.

From January 2012 I will serve as the editorial assistant for Theoretical Criminology.

My doctoral research is supervised by Mary Bosworth. It explores the ways in which pictorial representation is implicated in the (re)production and perceptions of the criminal legal subject. I am most grateful for financial assistance from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) who have kindly offered to support this research under a 1+3 studentship.

Before beginning my DPhil, I received an LLB from the University of Edinburgh (with First Class Honours) where I was awarded the Derrick McClintock Prize (best performance in Criminology Honours), and an MSc from the University of Oxford (with Distinction) where I was awarded the Routledge Criminology Prize (best performance on the MSc).

My wider research interests include the distinction between empathy and sympathy and its inconsistent application in criminal-legal and criminological theorising. I am also interested in the concept of the criminal trial as a civic tragedy and, more generally, moral philosophy.

From January 2012 I will serve as the editorial assistant for Theoretical Criminology.

DPhil Criminology

My doctoral research is supervised by Mary Bosworth. It explores the ways in which pictorial representation is implicated in the (re)production and perceptions of the criminal legal subject. I am most grateful for financial assistance from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) who have kindly offered to support this research under a 1+3 studentship.

Before beginning my DPhil, I received an LLB from the University of Edinburgh (with First Class Honours) where I was awarded the Derrick McClintock Prize (best performance in Criminology Honours), and an MSc from the University of Oxford (with Distinction) where I was awarded the Routledge Criminology Prize (best performance on the MSc).

My wider research interests include the distinction between empathy and sympathy and its inconsistent application in criminal-legal and criminological theorising. I am also interested in the concept of the criminal trial as a civic tragedy and, more generally, moral philosophy.

From January 2012 I will serve as the editorial assistant for Theoretical Criminology.

DPhil Criminology

My doctoral research is supervised by Mary Bosworth. It explores the ways in which pictorial representation is implicated in the (re)production and perceptions of the criminal legal subject. I am most grateful for financial assistance from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) who have kindly offered to support this research under a 1+3 studentship.

Before beginning my DPhil, I received an LLB from the University of Edinburgh (with First Class Honours) where I was awarded the Derrick McClintock Prize (best performance in Criminology Honours), and an MSc from the University of Oxford (with Distinction) where I was awarded the Routledge Criminology Prize (best performance on the MSc).

My wider research interests include the distinction between empathy and sympathy and its inconsistent application in criminal-legal and criminological theorising. I am also interested in the concept of the criminal trial as a civic tragedy and, more generally, moral philosophy.

From January 2012 I will serve as the editorial assistant for Theoretical Criminology.


Other details

Correspondence address:
Green Templeton College
Woodstock Road Oxford OX2 6HG

Link to Centre for Criminology web site



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