Role
Modules taught on:
CRIM100310/315: The Justice Process (module co-leader)
CRIM30295: Cultural Criminology (module co-leader)
CRIM40200 Approaches to Criminological Theory and Research Methods
Career overview
Ian is an actively engaged in both teaching and research, with a focus around cultural criminology and social justice. After completing his doctoral thesis at Keele University in 2015 entitled 'Graftin' up 'Anley Duck: narrating the influence of unemployment upon identity and crime in Stoke-on-Trent' he worked as a Housing Options Officer for Walsall Council and taught at Birmingham City University and Liverpool Hope University. Ian joined NTU in 2018 and since then has continued to explore core themes around social exclusion and marginalisation in research and teaching.
Research areas
His interests lie at the intersection between crime, culture, society and active citizenship. He is currently working on a number of projects including exploring violence in a Young Offenders' Institute, understanding constructions of sharks in the popular imagination, and is a co-investigator on a Nuffield Foundation project exploring themes around He has previously explored themes around the roots of Brexit in deprived post-industrial communities, issues around marginalisation, critically evaluated the harms underpinning the leisure cruising industry, and explored the impact of populist constructions of sexual offending in society. He is developing an edited collection entitled 'Holistic Responses to Reducing Reoffending' with Rahmanara Chowdhury at MIHE which they hope to publish in late 2023.
Opportunities arise to carry out postgraduate research towards an MPhil/PhD in the areas identified above. Further information may be obtained on the NTU Research Degrees website /research/research-degrees-at-ntu
External activity
Ian has previously conducted evaluations of the Homes for £1 housing scheme in Liverpool on behalf of Liverpool City Council, and as part of a team at NTU on reducing violence in a Young Offender's Institute
Publications
In development:
Mahoney I, Slade K and Thurston L (in development) Quick-Time, Slow-Time: Developing a model of learning, understanding and staff support following violent incidents in a Young Offenders’ Institute
Motley L, Tiwari P, Mahoney I and Thompson B (in development) Analysing the Impact of the Coronavirus Pandemic on the Commission of Residential Burglary in London
Mahoney I and Chowdhury R (in development) Holistic Responses to Reducing Reoffending (London: Routledge) - due late 2023
Publications:
Mahoney I, Teague K, Long M and Winder B (2022) Populist and vindictive responses to sexual offending against children, pluralities of violence and the implications for criminal and social justice, Archives of Criminology 44(1) pp.123-145
Mahoney I and Collins V (2020) The capitalist voyeur: commodification, consumption and the spectacle of the cruise. Leisure Studies 39(2) pp.280-293
Mahoney I (2019) Considering the role of homeless hostels as sites of discipline and regulation. Å·ÃÀ¾ÞÈé Journal of Sociology and Social Policy 39(3/4) pp.250-263
Mahoney I and Kearon T (2018) Social Quality and Brexit in Stoke-on-Trent, England. Å·ÃÀ¾ÞÈé Journal of Social Quality 8(1) pp.1-20
Mahoney I and Kearon T (2018) (De)Constructing Ethical Narratives in Criminological Research. Research Ethics 14(2) pp.1-5
Mahoney I and Kearon T (2017) Formulating the post-industrial self: the role of petty crime among unemployed, working-class men in Stoke-on-Trent, in Walker C and Roberts S (Eds.) Masculinity, Labour and Neoliberalism: Working-class men in Å·ÃÀ¾ÞÈé Perspective, Palgrave: London. pp.77-99
Op-Eds:
Mahoney I and Kearon T (2017) Selling Homes for £1 Gives Local Authorities the Power to Revive Deprived Communities. The Conversation [Online] available at https://theconversation.com/selling-homes-for-1-gives-local-authorities-the-power-to-revive-deprived-communities-88265
Mahoney I (2016) Censoring the Terrors of War, Open Democracy [Online] available at https://www.opendemocracy.net/transformation/ian-mahoney/censoring-terrors-of-war