Dr Jo Britton (she/her)
BA, PhD
Department of Sociological Studies
Senior Lecturer in Applied Sociology
Director of Postgraduate Affairs and Research
Director of One University
+44 114 222 6431
Full contact details
Department of Sociological Studies
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
91Ö±²¥
S10 2AH
- Profile
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Jo first joined the Department of Sociological Studies in the mid-1990s as a postgraduate research student, having completed a Sociology degree at Liverpool University.
After completing her PhD, Jo worked in the Sociology Department at Manchester University as a Research Officer and then a Leverhulme Trust Research Fellow, before returning to 91Ö±²¥ as a lecturer.
- Research interests
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Jo's research interests incorporate a number of key areas of sociological enquiry:
- Theories of race and racism;
- Theories of identity;
- Muslim minorities;
- Multiculturalism and citizenship;
- Critical whiteness and ‘mixed race’ studies;
- Inter-generational relations;
- Qualitative research methods.
Jo has researched and written about the meaning and role of race, racism and identity in different contexts. She has a long-standing interest in Muslim minorities, focusing on changing gender and generational relationships in Muslim families, belonging and identity, and multiculturalism, cohesion and integration.
This has included researching the impact of child sexual exploitation abuse scandals on Muslim men. Jo's current research interests also include a focus on inter-generational relations and critical whiteness studies.
She has written about motherhood, whiteness and identity in mixed race families and was co-investigator on a research project exploring young and older people’s understanding of generational positions and relationships.
Jo is co-investigator on an ESRC project exploring ethnicity and unequal ageing in Rotherham and 91Ö±²¥. The project is a unique cross-sector collaboration which includes working in partnership with Black, Minority Ethnic and Refugee communities.
- Publications
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Books
- Understanding Muslim Family Life Changing Relationships, Personal Life and Inequality. Policy Press.
Journal articles
- . Qualitative Research.
- . Ethnic and Racial Studies, 42(5), 688-706.
- . Sociology, 53(1), 36-51.
- . Ethnic and Racial Studies, 41(8), 1493-1495.
- . Children and Society, 29(5), 495-507.
- . Sociological Research Online, 20(3), 207-212.
- . ETHNIC AND RACIAL STUDIES, 36(8), 1311-1322.
- Researching White Mothers of Mixed Parentage Children: The Significance of Kinship and Social Networks. Ethnic and Racial Studies, 36(8), 1311-1322.
- . Ethnic and Racial Studies, 34(3), 509-527.
- . SOCIOLOGY, 38(4), 795-814.
- Migration, Mobility and the Middle Class. International Journal of Urban and Rural Research, 27(3), 495-509.
- Mobility and the middle classes: A case study of Manchester and the North West. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF URBAN AND REGIONAL RESEARCH, 27(3), 495-+.
- . J ETHN MIGR STUD, 29(1), 103-119.
- Addressing Ethnic Economic Disadvantage: The Necessity of Incorporating Income and Asset Levels. Benefits, 10(2), 118-119.
- . Work, Employment and Society, 14(3), 521-540.
- Economic Restructuring, Globalisation and the Professions: A Case Study of Manchester’s Business and Financial Sector. Work, Employment and Society, 14(2), 521-540.
- . Ethnic and Racial Studies, 23(4), 692-711.
- Race and policing - A study of police custody. BRIT J CRIMINOL, 40(4), 639-658.
- . Sociology, 33(2), 451-469.
- . Sociology, 33(2), 454-456.
- Recruiting and Retaining Black Volunteers: A Study of a Black Voluntary Organisation. Voluntary Action, 1(3), 9-24.
- . Sociology, 31(2), 378-379.
- . Immigrants & Minorities, 14(3), 308-318.
Chapters
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 13-28). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 60-76). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 117-136). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 1-12). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 29-41). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 97-116). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 77-96). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. 42-59). Bristol University Press
- , Understanding Muslim Family Life (pp. vi-vi). Bristol University Press
- , Networked Urbanism: Social Capital in the City (pp. 197-215).
- Researching White Mothers of Mixed Parentage Children: The Significance of Investigating Whiteness In Barn V & Harman V (Ed.), Mothering, Mixed Families and Racialised Boundaries (pp. 47-58). London: Routledge.
- Conserving the past of a quiet suburb: Urban politics, association networks and speaking for ‘the community’, Networked Urbanism: Social Capital in the City (pp. 197-216).
- Conserving the past of a quiet suburb: urban politics, association networks and speaking for 'the community In Blokland-Potters T & Savage M (Ed.), Networked Urbanism: Social Capital and the City (pp. 197-216). Ashgate Publishing Company
- Categorising and Policy Making In Hodgson SM & Irving Z (Ed.), Policy Reconsidered (pp. 61-79). The Policy Press
- Minorities, Crime and Criminal Justice In Muncie J & Wilson D (Ed.), Student Handbook of Criminal Justice and Criminology (pp. 81-92). Routledge-Cavendish
- , City matters (pp. 255-268). Policy Press
- , City matters (pp. 255-268). Policy Press
- The 'good' suburb as an urban asset in enhancing a city's competitiveness In Boddy M & Parkinson MH (Ed.), City Matters (pp. 255-268).
- Family and Community Ties in Space and Time In Allan G & Jones G (Ed.), Social Relations and the Life Course (pp. 155-172). Palgrave MacMillan
- , Social Relations and the Life Course (pp. 172-186). Palgrave Macmillan UK
- , Practising Identities (pp. 134-154). Palgrave Macmillan UK
Book reviews
- Research group
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Jo welcomes applications to study for MPhil or PhD research degrees with her, either full or part-time, in any areas linked to the following broad themes:
- Race and racism (including critical whiteness and mixed race studies);
- Muslim minorities;
- Identity.
Topics of her current and recent postgraduates include:
- The Brexit vote’s implications for dimensions of belonging among British-born white working-class residents in England
- Exploring the lived experiences of South Asian Muslim lone mothers, intersectionality and the role played by South Asian organisations in their lives
- A study of everyday multi-culture in North Manchester
- Transracial adoption
- From farms to foundries: An Arab community in industrial Britain
- Risk and resilience in the lives of British Somali youths.
- Teaching interests
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Jo teaches and supervise students at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. All of her teaching is linked by a focus on examining patterns of social inequality and the operation of power and privilege in different social and political contexts.
Most of Jo's teaching is research-led as she believes that the theoretical foundations of her discipline are best explained using real-life, empirical examples.
Jo's aim across all of her teaching is to encourage students to develop a critical understanding of themselves as social actors who belong to a social structure and social order. In doing so, Jo also aims to provide students with the necessary tools to apply a sociological imagination to both their studies and everyday life.
Jo encourages students to engage with and evaluate a wide range of theories and evidence in order to appreciate the distinctive and far-reaching contribution of sociology.
- Teaching activities
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Jo currently convenes the following undergraduate modules:
- SCS3021 Whiteness, Power and Privilege
Jo is also involved in the supervision of students taking extended essays and dissertations at undergraduate and postgraduate levels on the following modules:
- SCS3001 Dissertation in Sociology
- SCS3002 Dissertation in Social Policy
- SCS3003 Extended Essay in Sociology
- SCS3004 Extended Essay in Social Policy
- SCS6330 Dissertation in Social Research
See our Undergraduate degree and Postgraduate taught degree pages.