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Victoria Canning is our new Visiting Professor

Portrait photo of a person wearing a black turtle neck.

She will contribute part-time to the Sociology of Law Department for two years. The recruitment is part of the Lund University Programme for Global Excellence, the University's largest international recruitment initiative to date.

Victoria Canning joins the Department at 20 percent for two years. She is a Professor of Criminology at Lancaster University, researching border harms and zemiology, torture, and sexualised violence. Additionally, she is the Head of the Harm, Crime and Criminalisation Research Centre, and Associate Director of Border Criminologies at Oxford University. Professor Canning has published seven books as author or editor and was the winner of the 2018 British Society of Criminology Book Prize.

Why did you choose Lund University?

"Lund University – and specifically the Department of Sociology of Law – has been such an important influence for me in its real-world impact and approaches to disrupting disciplinary norms. I have visited on numerous occasions and was lucky enough to have been inspired by Reza Banakar, whose vision for a defined space for a sociology of law has been carried on by contemporary colleagues."

How do you describe your current research?

"For almost 20 years, I have been researching border harms and responses to migrant survivors of violence and torture. My current research – Supporting Survival - moves the findings and theories from these projects into positive practice. Through collaborative toolkit development with NGOs and grassroot organisations, survivor and practitioner knowledge and expertise is more easily accessible."

What will be your main research focus during your time at Lund University?

"I see this as an opportunity to collectively build ways with Lund University colleagues to move research knowledge into practice and critical pedagogy. I’m excited to introduce the Supporting Survival toolkit and R2R Asylum Navigation Board to the department and hope to develop projects where similar approaches can be take,n working across the multitude of research expertise in the department."