Professor Melissa Bull

Profile image of Professor Melissa Bull

Faculty of Creative Industries, Education & Social Justice,
School of Justice


Personal details

Positions

Professor
Faculty of Creative Industries, Education & Social Justice,
School of Justice

Keywords

QUT Centre for Justice, Illicit Drug Regulation, Policing and the Global South, Policing and Diversity

Research field

Criminology, Law

Field of Research code, Australian and New Zealand Standard Research Classification (ANZSRC), 2008

Qualifications

  • Doctor of Philosophy (Griffith University)

Professional memberships and associations

Asian Society of Criminology Editorial Board Member, International Journal for Crime Justice and Social Democracy Editorial Board Member, Policing and Society:  An International Journal (2013-2018) Reviewer, Australian Research Council competitive grant program in the fields of policing and drug regulation Reviewer, European Social Research Council competitive grant program in the field of policing and international policing

Publications

QUT ePrints

For more publications by Melissa, explore their research in QUT ePrints (our digital repository).

View more publications

Filter publications:

A complete list of publications is available at: https://www.qut.edu.au/about/our-people/academic-profiles/m.bull

Supervision

Current supervisions

  • Fakafoki Ki Api (Returned Home) - The Deportation of Tongan Non-citizen Criminals from Australia: an analysis of deportee's experiences and the perceptions and attitudes of Tonga towards receiving criminal deportees from Australia
    PhD, Associate Supervisor
    Other supervisors: Professor John Scott, Associate Professor Danielle Watson
  • Lessons From Norway: Shaping The Political Economy for The Prevention of Violence Against Women
    PhD, Principal Supervisor
    Other supervisors: Professor Kerry Carrington
  • The Relationship Between Climate Change, Peace and Security
    PhD, Principal Supervisor
    Other supervisors: Dr Caitlin Mollica
  • Non-mobilised pathways to socio-political participation by marginalised youth in authoritarian contexts
    PhD, Mentoring Supervisor
    Other supervisors: Adjunct Professor Helen Berents, Dr Caitlin Mollica