1.Foreword. 2.Acknowledgement. 3.Introduction: Redrawing the Boundaries of Criminological Knowledge. Part 1: Police and Lived Experience. 4.
Extract 16 From Cell 101. 5.Silent Voices: Workplace Discrimination and Microaggressions Experienced by Women in Law Enforcement. 6.Neurodiversity at the Nexus: Addressing the Challenges and Opportunities at the Intersections of Neurodiversity and Law Enforcement. 7.A Descriptive Scientific Phenomenological Approach to Criminology and Criminal Legal Research. Part 2: Courts and Lived Experience.
8.The Lucifer Effect. 9.Moving From "Offenders" to Partners: Reflections on the Potential for Courts as Co-designed Institutions. 10.Feminist Perspectives of Lived Experience of the Criminal Courts Connecting the Continuum: Women's Ways of Knowing and the Criminal Courts. Part 3: Punishment and Lived Experience. 11.
6 Years Old. 12.Mapping the Unassimilable: Carceral Narratives through Lived Experience, Psychoanalysis, and Agonism. 13.Out of the Frying Pan? A Personal and Scholarly Interest in Protective Housing in Prisons: Reflecting on Vulnerability, Decision-Making and the Quest for Humane Penal Practices. 14.From Prison to Halfway House: Using Lived Experience and Feminist Co-Ethnography to Reform Community Corrections. Part 4: Applying Lived Experience.
15.Concrete Cage. 16.The Role of Prison Radio and Storytelling in Generative Criminology. 17.Resisting Carceral Colonialism through Lived Experience in Night Patrol Research. 18.The Living, Being, and Doing of Praxis: Insurgent-Knowledge-Making through 'Liberatory Experiential Epistemology' and 'Radical Autoethnography' in the Free Palestine Movement.
19.From the chaotic debris of experience, we select fragments. arguing with lived experience of the criminal justice system and taking lessons for convict criminology.