Scholar

Alice Mills

H-index: 17
Psychology 28%
Sociology 16%

by Anna SergiReposted by: Alice Mills

annasergi.bsky.social
As a European Criminologist, and a Winner of the Early Career Award of the European Society of Criminology I condemn the statement by colleagues of the Israeli Society of Criminology: it is a betrayal of our commitment to be social scientists led by facts and reason

www.facebook.com/annasergiIT/...
Anna Sergi
As part of my commitment to European Criminology next week I will be participating in #Eurocrim2025 in Athens. During the General Assembly we will need to debate on a motion about the European...
www.facebook.com

Reposted by: Alice Mills

domesticanimal.bsky.social
Butter Theory explained.
My Stuff #cartoon today #nzpol #butter #CostOfLiving
Cartoon. Title: “Butter Theory”. In a small picture Finance Minister Nicola Willis is saying, “I’ve invited Fonterra CEO Miles Hurrell to explain to you Butter Theory” Large picture of Miles Hurrell, who is saying, “The excellent returns farmers are making on butter, trickles down to the NZ Consumer in the form of eye-watering prices” accompanied by a small picture of a weeping woman with small amount of butter plopping on her head. The cartoon closes with Nicola Willis saying, “Thank you, Miles. We can see why you’re paid $6 million a year”
thehowardleague.bsky.social
Winchester: A truly squalid, overcrowded Victorian jail.

The prison received an awful inspection report in 2022, but things have gone from bad to worse.

Read our response to @hmiprisonsnews.bsky.social's inspection report:
howardleague.org/news/winches...
Poor cell conditions at Winchester prison.

Reposted by: Alice Mills

prisonpolicy.org
Formerly incarcerated people earn far less than the general population – about 53% of the median US worker’s wage.

Reentry is difficult in and of itself. How is anyone supposed to successfully navigate it without financial stability?
Graph titled: Formerly incarcerated people earn far less than the general population

Reposted by: Alice Mills

gelbard.ca
First co-authored publication from my postdoc!

‘It’s like you’re still in jail’: exploring the subjugation of emotional knowledge in prison-to-community #reintegration in Canada

Co-authored with Sophie Lachapelle and Jennifer M. Kilty.

DM for free copy.
#criminology #reentry #parole #carceral
‘It’s like you’re still in jail’: exploring the subjugation of emotional knowledge in prison-to-community reintegration in Canada
Reintegration means being released from prison and returning to the community; however, the process is much more complex than this simplistic definition implies. In addition to acquiring the resour...
doi.org

by Virginia BraunReposted by: Alice Mills

te-ara-paerangi.community
And funding opportunities for the social sciences and humanities have been cut from the Horizon Europe programme. 🤬
Changes to MBIE’s Horizon Europe Top-Up fund scheme

Tēnā koutou

MBIE is providing an update on the Horizon Europe Top-Up funding scheme.  

Change to Top-Up fund eligibility for projects in Cluster 2  

From 1 February 2025, projects in Cluster 2, Culture, Creativity & Inclusive Society, will no longer be eligible for funding through the MBIE Horizon Europe Top-Up funding scheme.  

This change is being made to align the Top-Up fund settings with the Government’s priorities for Science, Innovation & Technology investments, and direction outlined in the Catalyst Fund investment Plan. Research organisations who have submitted a proposal for a Cluster 2 project which opened before 1 February 2025 and who registered for Top-Up funding with MBIE within 10 working days of the European Commission (EC) call for proposals closing will still be eligible for Horizon Europe Top-Up funding.

Reposted by: Alice Mills

kopyor.bsky.social
My union’s statement and open letter on the short-sighted cuts to #SocialSciences and #Humanities from the #Marsden Fund. #AcademicSky

www.together.org.nz/love_humanit...
Save Humanities and Social Sciences
Join us in building a better world
www.together.org.nz

Reposted by: Alice Mills

proflizzystanley.bsky.social
NZ govt has removed the humanities & soc sciences from main independent funding (Marsden). Now focused on 'economic benefit' projects

Extraordinary in its ideological focus; lack of understanding about how economy, politics, arts and socio-cultures intersect; and disregard of quality of life in NZ

Reposted by: Alice Mills

nihilcurtis.bsky.social
In the most direct statement yet that NZ's hard right government is totally opposed to any research that might challenge the social order they support, they have stripped the Humanities & Social Science panels from the largest fund for innovative research in the country.
Minister of Science, Innovation and Technology Judith Collins today announced the Government has updated the Marsden Fund to focus on core scientific research that helps lift our economic growth and contributes to science with a purpose.
“The Government has been clear in its mandate to rebuild our economy. We are focused on a system that supports growth, and a science sector that drives high-tech, high-productivity, high-value businesses and jobs,” Ms Collins says
“I have updated the Marsden Fund Investment Plan and Terms of Reference to ensure that future funding is going to science that helps to meet this goal.”
The new Investment Plan focuses on supporting research that can be of economic, environmental or health benefit to New Zealand.  The new Terms of Reference outline that approximately 50 per cent of funds will go towards supporting proposals with economic benefits to New Zealand.
“The Marsden Fund will continue to support blue-skies research, the type that advances new ideas and encourages innovation and creativity and where the benefit may not be immediately apparent. It is important that we support new ideas which lead to developing new technologies and products, boosting economic growth, and enhancing New Zealand's quality of life,” Ms Collins says. 
“The focus of the Fund will shift to core science, with the humanities and social sciences panels disbanded and no longer supported. Real impact on our economy will come from areas such as physics, chemistry, maths, engineering and biomedical sciences.

Reposted by: Alice Mills

spookademic.bsky.social
Making a first post in a new place is tricky—good thing the book @robingalnander.bsky.social and I wrote has a cover now so that I know what to throw out there. 🥳

References

Fields & subjects

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