
Dr Roxana Pessoa Cavalcanti
BA, MA, PG Cert HE, PhD
Expertise
Through the lenses of transnational feminisms, my work theorises violence, carcerality, policing and criminalisation as they affect urban communities in Brazil, social movements in Latin America and migrant women in the UK.
Current positions
Senior Lecturer
School for Policy Studies
Contact
Press and media
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Biography
After my PhD, and prior to working at the University of Bristol, I worked at the University of Brighton, the University of Westminster and at the Universidad Technica de Loja, Ecuador.
My research has been funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (ESRC), the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Newton Fund-CONFAP, the British Academy and Brazilian Academy of Sciences. In 2020 I received the Rising Stars Award for my work with social justice activists in Brazil and in 2022 I received the Future Research Leader's award for my work with Latin American women in the UK.
I am currently one of the Co-Editors of the Journal for Gender-Based Violence and serve as lead co-editor for the second edition of Palgrave's Handbook of Criminology and the Global South.
Research interests
Dr Roxana Pessoa Cavalcanti is a critical criminologist whose research interests lie at the intersections of southern, postcolonial and decolonial theory, transnational feminisms and carcerality. Building on these fields, her work theorises urban violence, issues of power and inequalities relating to gender, class and racialisation.
Dr Pessoa Cavalcanti's most recent projects focus on feminist activism, women's experiences of migration, police violence and the criminalisation of dissent in Latin America. She is currentling editting the second edition of The Palgrave Handbook of Criminology and the Global South with Professor Kerry Carrington, Dr David Fonseca, Dr Valeria Vegh Weis, Professor Russell Hogg and Professor John Scott. She co-edited the 'Southern Perspectives on Policing, Security and Social Order' (Bristol University Press, 2023) with Zoha Waseem and Peter Squires.
She is the author of 'A Southern Criminology of Violence, Youth and Policing' (Routledge, 2020), co-founder and co-director of The Feminist Cities Colab, a member of the British Society of Criminology and the European Group for the Study of Deviance and Social Control. She is affiliated with the Centre for the Study of Violence (NEV) at the University of São Paulo and also a visiting professor at UTPL university in Ecuador. She completed her PhD in 2017 at the Brazil Institute at King’s College London, and received a Master in Criminology in 2012 at the University of Brighton.
Prior to working at the University of Bristol, she worked at the University of Brighton, the University of Westminster and was a research fellow at the Kluge Center, Library of Congress (Washington DC, USA) where she conducted research into declassified US government documents about international police assistance.
Her research has been funded by the Economic and Social Science Research Council (ESRC), the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), the Newton Fund-CONFAP, the British Academy and Brazilian Academy of Sciences.
Current Projects
‘The Feminist Cities Lab: Contemporary Feminist Activism and Urban Violence in Latin America’ (2023-2025) [as co-investigator, KFSFF\100021]
Selected Media Appearances:
2023 Student Hours podcast.
2021 The Sociology Show podcast episode.
2020 Justice Focus podcast episode.
2020 Appeared on Headline.
2020 ‘Brazil: Will playing pandemic politics help or hurt Bolsonaro? Country faces mounting coronavirus death toll and prospect of increased military power’. Aljazeera, The Stream, 16/06/2020.
2020 Consulted by Castro, J.R. for ‘How Brazil’s Military Police became a key supporter of Jair Bolsonaro’. The Brazilian Report, 4/06/2020.
Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Criminalisation of Climate Protest
Principal Investigator
Role
Principal Investigator
Description
Exploring the criminalisation and repression of climate and environmental protest around the world, using quantitative and qualitative databases.Managing organisational unit
School for Policy StudiesDates
08/01/2024 to 13/12/2024
Publications
Recent publications
03/01/2025Tightening the grip of control
Criminalisation of Dissent in Times of Crisis
On violence, racialisation and crime control
The Palgrave Handbook of Criminology and the Global South
Women doing fieldwork in the margins
Subjectivity at Latin America's Urban Margins
Racism and the food system from asylum hotels to overfishing in Senegal Institute of Race Relations
The legacies of colonialism in policing and security
Teaching
At Bristol I am teaching units including Gender-Based Violence; Key Thinkers; Contemporary Studies in Harm, Violence and Oppression; Punishment and Society; Research Methods.
I supervise post-graduate students and PhD researchers.
PhD supervision
Ramon Almeida (2022-2026) Transforming public security policies to tackle hate crime against LGBT groups in Brazil (ESRC funded 1+3 programme, as lead supervisor)
Maia Brons (2021-2025) Beneath the Surface: Water Insecurity, Mobility and Urban Marginality in Newham, East London. (Funded by DTA Future Societies, co-supervised with Nichola Khan and Julie Doyle).
Helen Williamson (2020 – 2024) Criminal armourers and illegal firearm supply in the UK. University of Brighton. (Co-supervised with Peter Squires and Craig Johnstone).