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Biography
Dr Anne-Marie Greenslade is a Senior Lecturer with a background as a frontline practitioner in both the voluntary and public sectors. Her experience supporting refugee communities in Kosovo fuelled her interest in international human rights; she later worked alongside the police and the CPS as an independent advocate for survivors of rape and sexual abuse.
Anne-Marie has an LLM in International Human Rights, specialising in the legal responses to human trafficking and contemporary slavery. She joined Leeds Law School in 2017 as a Graduate Teaching Assistant and became a Lecturer in 2021. She was awarded her PhD in 2022 and is now Course Leader for the Postgraduate Diploma in Law (distance learning).
Anne-Marie has contributed to roundtables for the Modern Slavery and Human Rights Policy and Evidence Centre and won awards for LBU’s Vitae 3MT and the Partnership for Conflict, Crime and Security Research “Snapshots”.
Industry Expertise (3)
Legal Services
Education/Learning
Research
Areas of Expertise (5)
UK Constitutional Law
Human Rights
Modern Slavery
Human Trafficking
Gender-Based Violence
Accomplishments (2)
Vitae 3MT (professional)
LBU
Snapshot (professional)
Partnership for Conflict, Crime and Security Research
Education (5)
Leeds Beckett University: PhD, Law 2021
Birmingham City School of Law: LLM, International Human Rights 2016
Birmingham City School of Law: Graduate Diploma, Law 2015
Liverpool John Moores University: PGCert, Primary Mental Health Care 2006
Keele University: BA, Criminology and International Politics 2005
Links (3)
Languages (1)
- English
Articles (2)
Gaming the system: How the government is failing victims of human trafficking
Transforming Society2023 In June, the Home Secretary agreed to withdraw rules in the Modern Slavery Statutory Guidance that required potential victims of modern slavery and trafficking to submit ‘objective’ evidence in their claims.
The Significance of the Judge within the Choices and Consequences and Prolific Intensive Schemes: International Lessons for England and Wales and Back again
International Journal for Court Administration2022 This research paper examines the significance of the judges in the problem-solving courts of England and Wales’s Choices and Consequences (C2) and Prolific Intensive (PI) programmes using the lenses and language of therapeutic jurisprudence. These unique schemes mobilise an intensive combination of strict control measures (with a view to deterring people from reoffending) alongside a personalised package of rehabilitative support overseen by a judge in a problem-solving court.
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