John Lea
#46,954
Most Influential Person Now
British criminologist
John Lea 's AcademicInfluence.com Rankings
John Lea criminal-justice Degrees
Criminal Justice
#65
World Rank
#76
Historical Rank
Criminology
#39
World Rank
#47
Historical Rank
Download Badge
Criminal Justice
John Lea 's Degrees
- Bachelors Criminology University of Manchester
- PhD Criminology University of Oxford
Why Is John Lea Influential?
(Suggest an Edit or Addition)According to Wikipedia, John Lea is a British left realist criminologist. For many years he was based at the Centre for Criminology and the Crime and Conflict Research Centre, Middlesex University in the United Kingdom. Career He graduated from the London School of Economics and Political Science, University of London with a BSc in Economics in 1967, before gaining MSc's in Economics and Social Policy there too.
John Lea 's Published Works
Published Works
- What is to be done about law and order (1984) (383)
- Losing the Fight Against Crime (1985) (157)
- Reconstructing Leviathan: Emerging contours of the security state (2011) (123)
- Soils and their use in Wales. (1984) (106)
- The Macpherson Report and the Question of Institutional Racism (2000) (58)
- Developing research-based curricula in college-based higher education (2014) (49)
- Criminalisation and advanced marginality : critically exploring the work of Loïc Wacquant (2012) (47)
- Crime and Modernity: Continuities in Left Realist Criminology (2002) (43)
- Enabling Remote Access to Fieldwork: Gaining Insight into the Pedagogic Effectiveness of ‘Direct’ and ‘Remote’ Field Activities (2012) (40)
- Higher education in further education: capturing and promoting HEness (2012) (35)
- Defending probation: Beyond privatisation and security (2014) (33)
- Freud and Education (2012) (29)
- Working in Post-Compulsory Education (2003) (25)
- Social Crime Revisited (1999) (21)
- Bringing the state back in: understanding neoliberal security (2012) (21)
- Left Realism, community and state-building (2010) (18)
- Designing interconnected distributed resources for collaborative inquiry based science education (2011) (17)
- Understanding the riots (2015) (15)
- Enhancing Learning And Teaching In Higher Education: Engaging With The Dimensions Of Practice (2015) (15)
- Criminology and Postmodernity (1998) (15)
- Left Realism: a defence (1987) (14)
- Hitting criminals where it hurts: organised crime and the erosion of due process (2004) (13)
- Privatization and coercion: The question of legitimacy (2018) (13)
- Political Correctness and Higher Education: British and American Perspectives (2008) (13)
- From denizen to citizen and back: governing the Precariat through crime (2013) (12)
- Capturing an HE ethos in college higher education practice (2013) (11)
- Jock Young and the Development of Left Realist Criminology (2015) (11)
- Remote fieldwork: using portable wireless networks and backhaul links to participate remotely in fieldwork (2010) (9)
- Left Realism: A Radical Criminology for the Current Crisis (2016) (8)
- A method for collecting interstitial fluid from skin of sheep. (1992) (7)
- Introduction: reading Wacquant, opening questions and overview (2012) (6)
- Institutional racism in policing: the Macpherson report and its consequences (2003) (6)
- Understanding the riots: John Lea and Simon Hallsworth put the riots into political and historic perspective (2012) (6)
- Privatising Justice (2020) (5)
- Defunding the police in the UK: Critical questions and practical suggestions (2022) (5)
- Working with 'mission control' in scientific fieldwork: supporting interactions between in situ and distanced collaborators (2011) (5)
- Cholera, with reference to the geological theory: a proximate cause - a law by which it is governed - a prophylactic 1850. (2013) (5)
- Reconnecting the King with his head: The fall and resurrection of the state in criminological theory (2012) (5)
- New deviancy, Marxism and the politics of left realism: Reflections on Jock Young’s early writings (2014) (4)
- Book review: Daniel Briggs (ed.), The English Riots of 2011: A Summer of Discontent (2013) (4)
- From Brixton to Bradford: official discourse on race and urban violence in the United Kingdom. (2004) (4)
- Writing about learning and teaching in higher education: Creating and contributing to scholarly conversations across a range of genres (2020) (3)
- Live linking of fieldwork to the laboratory increases students inquiry based reflections (2011) (3)
- Development of a computerised system to provide audit of pharmaceutical activity (1993) (3)
- ‘GETTING YOUR LINES RIGHT’ : Scripted communication in post-compulsory education (2004) (3)
- Turning down the volume control on student voice in order to enhance student engagement (2016) (3)
- Coronavirus and changing conditions for crime (2020) (2)
- The romance of animal arts and crafts (2)
- War, Criminal Justice and the Rebirth of Privatisation (2016) (2)
- CPD for Teachers in Post-compulsory Education. (2008) (1)
- Youth and community: connections and disconnections: A summary report for Arts and Humanities Research Council "Connected Communities project" (2011) (1)
- Book review: Roger Matthews, Realist Criminology (2015) (1)
- Capital Punishment in Twentieth Century Britain: Audience, Justice, Memory. By Lizzie Seal (Routledge, 2014, 187pp. £85.00) (2016) (1)
- Scholarship as student engagement in college higher education (2020) (1)
- Youth and Community: Connections and Disconnections (2011) (1)
- Marxism and Criminology: A History of Criminal Selectivity. By Valeria Vegh Weis (Leiden: Brill (hdbk), 2017, €138, Chicago: Haymarket Books (pbck), 2018, 340pp. £19.78) (2018) (1)
- Back to the Future: Neoliberalism as Social and Political Regression (2015) (1)
- Reply to Norman Ginsburg (1984) (1)
- Case Studies of Research Based Curricula in College Based Higher Education (CBHE) (2013) (1)
- Revitalizing Criminological Theory: Towards a New Ultra-Realism. By Steve Hall and Simon Winlow (Routledge, 2015, 154pp. £26.99) (2016) (1)
- Book Review Symposium: Steven Pinker, The Better Angels of Our Nature: A History of Violence and Humanity (2013) (1)
- The Wonders of Animal Ingenuity (2010) (0)
- The romance of animal arts and crafts : being an interesting account of the spinning, weaving, sewing manufacture of paper and pottery, aeronautics, raft-building, road-making, and various other industries of wild life / (0)
- Book review: Terrorism, rights and the rule of law: Negotiating justice in Ireland, Barry Vaughan and Shane Kilcommins. Cullompton: Willan Publishing, 2008. 240 pp. (including index). £17.99. ISBN 1—843922—64—9 (2009) (0)
- Leading a step-change in scholarship in college higher education (2020) (0)
- Photorespiratory Mutants oftheMitochondrial Conversion ofGlycine toSerine (1990) (0)
- Rehabilitating and Resettling Offenders in the Community. By Anthony Goodman (Wiley-Blackwell, 2012, 250pp. £32.99 pb) (2014) (0)
- Book reviews : Crime in a Minority Situation: The Maltese Case Geoff Dench Institute of Community Studies, London, 1991, 308pp, £12.95 pbk (1993) (0)
- Karl Marx (1818-83) and Frederich Engels (1820-95) (2010) (0)
- The romance of bird life : being an account of the education, courtship, sport and play, journeys, fishing, fighting, piracy, domestic and social habits, instinct, strange friendships and other interesting aspects of the life of birds (0)
- The Condition of Britain: Essays on Frederick Engels (1998) (0)
- Scholarly Activity in Provider Context (2014) (0)
- Marxist criminologies (2018) (0)
- Heritable victimization and the benefits of agonistic (2010) (0)
- Book Review: The new punitiveness (2007) (0)
- Bergalli and the Spanish Common Sessions (2006) (0)
- Learning your lines: scripted communication in post compulsory education (2004) (0)
- Educational Equality (2012) (0)
- Book review: Mark Cowling Marxism and Criminological Theory: A Critique and a Toolkit, Basingstoke: Palgrave-Macmillan, 2008; 292pp. £50 ISBN 9781403945990 (hbk) (2011) (0)
- Water buffaloes in Pennsylvania: Closing free speech (2010) (0)
- Connected communities. Youth and community: connections and disconnections (2011) (0)
- War, terrorism and criminal justice (2019) (0)
- A Criminology of War? By Ross McGarry and Sandra Walklate (Bristol University Press, 2019, 176pp, £48.00) (2020) (0)
- Post-Fordism and Criminality (2018) (0)
- Book Review of Freedom to Learn: The Threat to Student Academic Freedom and Why it Needs to be Reclaimed (2017) (0)
- Jock Young and the Development of Left Realist Criminology (2015) (0)
- The wonders of animal ingenuity / by H. Coupin and John Lea. (0)
- Book Review: Crime and Morality: The Significance of Criminal Justice in Post-Modern Culture. (2002) (0)
- Hidden Power: The Strategic Logic of Organised Crime. By James Cockayne (Hurst Publishers, 2016, 448pp. £20.00) (2018) (0)
- Gun Crime in Global Contexts. By Peter Squires (Routledge, 2014, 400pp. £29.99) (2016) (0)
- Pre-crime: Pre-emption, Precaution and the Future. By Jude McCulloch and Dean Wilson (London and New York: Routledge, 2016, 154pp. £34.99) (2018) (0)
- Review: Probation and Social Work on Trial: Violent Offenders and Child Abusers (2011) (0)
- Britain's decline, her economic disorder and its only remedy (2010) (0)
- Not if – but how – to defund the police: Response to our critics (2023) (0)
This paper list is powered by the following services:
Other Resources About John Lea
What Schools Are Affiliated With John Lea ?
John Lea is affiliated with the following schools: