Rage
  • Refreshments and lunch will be provided 
  • Plenary speakers: TBC
  • Levinsky Room, Roland Levinsky Building, ҹèƵ

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This conference invites papers that mobilise rage as a critical, affective, and political lens through which to interrogate systems of normalisation and domination. Rage is often dismissed as irrational, dangerous, or unproductive. 
Drawing on Sara Ahmed’s figure of the feminist killjoy, this conference understands rage not as a failure of civility but as confirming evidence that something is wrong. The killjoy refuses the happiness scripts that sustain systems of domination, exposing how comfort, order, and common sense are secured through the silencing of anger and the normalisation of harm. 
Within criminology, killjoy practices disrupt demands for neutrality and compliance, insisting that critical knowledge often emerges from being difficult, angry, and out of place. Rage, in this sense, becomes a method: a way of noticing the violence of machines that work best when they go unnoticed, unquestioned, and unchallenged. By ‘machines’ we refer not only to technological systems, but to the broader assemblages that structure and regulate social life. 
These include institutional practices, bureaucratic routines, legal frameworks, conceptual categories, and social norms that produce compliance, marginalisation, and control while often presenting themselves as neutral, necessary, or inevitable. 
Together, this conference seeks to ask:
What does rage reveal about contemporary systems of power, and how might it be mobilised to refuse, resist, and dismantle the machines that tell us to comply, obey, and accept violence in the name of order?
We encourage contributions that critically examine how such machines operate, whom they serve, and how they are resisted, disrupted, or reimagined. 
We welcome theoretical, empirical, methodological, creative, and experimental work that foregrounds affect, emotion, embodiment, and lived experience, particularly from perspectives historically marginalised within criminology. 
Areas of interest include, but are in no way limited to:
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Technological Machines
  • Algorithmic governance, predictive policing, and AI-driven control
  • Surveillance technologies, data extraction, and monitoring
  • Digital platforms, content moderation, and automated governance
  • Refusals of data neutrality.
Institutional and Carceral Machines
  • Policing, prisons, and carceral expansion
  • Bureaucracy, risk assessment, and administrative violence
  • Borders, migration control, and hostile environment policies
  • Punitive welfare systems and responsibilisation.
Social and Cultural Machines
  • Systems of normalisation and the production of “deviance”
  • Racialised, gendered, colonial, and ableist regimes of power
  • Youth, education, and disciplinary institutions.
Affective and Embodied Machines
  • Rage, anger, and other ‘unruly’ emotions in criminology
  • Emotional regulation, compliance, and the management of dissent
  • Mental health, disability, and regimes of behavioural control.
Knowledge and Conceptual Machines
  • Criminological categories, expertise, and epistemic violence
  • Quantification, objectivity, and the limits of detached analysis
  • Methodological refusals and experimental approaches.
Resistance, Refusal and Reimagination
  • Killjoy politics, complaining and collective rage
  • Protest, activism, and the criminalisation of resistance
  • Abolition, counter-conduct, and transformative justice
  • Art, culture, and creative expressions of rage
  • Solidarities, care, and alternative futures emerging from anger.
CALL FOR PAPERS: Please send a title and short abstract to Sian Lewis and Iain Channing before April 3, 2026.

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