Dr Juliet Rogers is an Associate Professor in Criminology in the School of Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne where she specialises in trauma studies. She previously taught at the Melbourne Law School where she completed her PhD. She was an Australian Research Council DECRA Fellow where she undertook an examination of the ‘Quality of Remorse’ in relation to periods of political and military conflict in Northern Ireland, South Africa and Australia. Juliet has been a Visiting Fellow at the University of Bologna Centre for the Study of Trauma, Italy; the European University Institute, Italy; Yale Law School, US; University of Cape Town Law School, South Africa and at Queens University Law School, Belfast. She is a member of the editorial board of Law, Text, Culture.
Prior to her academic career she was a therapist in the trauma field and a manager and youth worker in the community sector. This work gives her specialized knowledge in empirical research with marginalized communities. She has undertaken further study in psychoanalysis, education and groupwork. She has published extensively in the areas of political, legal and postcolonial theory using psychoanalysis as a tool for interrogating the subject's relation to prohibition and sovereignty.
Oct 08, 2024 16:43 pm UTC| Insights & Views Business
There is a disturbing trend of people travelling to the sadder places of the world: sites of military attacks, war zones and disasters. Dark tourism is now a phenomenon, with its own website and dedicated tour guides....