Hannah Bradby
Distinguished University Professor at Department of Sociology, Faculty
- Email:
- hannah.bradby[AT-sign]soc.uu.se
- Telephone:
- +4618-471 5183
- Visiting address:
- Engelska parken
Thunbergsvägen 3H - Postal address:
- Box 624
751 26 UPPSALA
Short presentation
Since the early 1990s, Hannah's research has looked at identity and inequalities around ethnicity, migration status and gender, with a particular focus on health. This work has been widely published in book and article form.
Having published her doctoral research as a novella, she maintains an interest in fiction as a form of evidence and as a research method for understanding health and illness in social context.
More information at http://hannah.bradby.info/
Also available at
Biography
After taking degrees from the Universities of Oxford and London (in both cases, scholarships were awarded), Hannah undertook doctoral research with the Medical Research Council Medical Sociology Unit in Glasgow. After a postdoctoral contract in Glasgow, she accepted a lectureship at the University of Warwick in the Department of Sociology, where she worked for a decade. She was visiting fellow at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic Diversity in Göttingen and a visiting fellow at King's College, London.
Over the years she has undertaken editorial roles with journals published by Taylor and Francis, Blackwells, Elsevier and, most recently, the open access journal Frontiers in Sociology
https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sociology#
She regularly blogs at https://www.cost-ofliving.net/
Research
Current funded research projects:
Together with Sarah Hamed, Suruchi Thapar-Björkert and Beth Maina Ahlberg: ' Understanding racism in healthcare: Developing and implementing anti-racist strategies through shared knowledge production and evaluation’ funded by Vetenskapsrådet.
Together with colleagues from the Universities of Birmingham, Melbourne & Bilkent: ‘Sexual and Gender-based Violence in the Refugee Crisis: Vulnerabilities, Inequalities and Responses’ funded by the Europe and Global Challenges 4th call, Riksbankjubileum, Volkswagen, Wellcome.
https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/research/superdiversity-institute/sereda/index.aspx
Past funders of research: the Economic and Social Research Council, The Welfare State Futures Norface programme and National Institute for Health Research.
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