1st Edition
New Forms of Civic Resistance and Activism
1- Emerging Voices of Civic Resistance and Activism.
Ian Mahoney, Tine Munk and Elliot Doornbos
Part One: Civic Agency in the Face of Power
2- Slow Activism and the Criminalisation of Contemporary Environmental Protest.
Angus Nurse
3- Grassroots Youth Organisations’ Role in Civic Activism: A Case Study of Hungarian Youth Initiatives Aiming for Educational Reform.
Boglarka Meggyesfalvi
4- The Hunger Games Rulebook: Portraits of Civilian Volunteers in Modern War.
Gabrielle Joni Verreault
5- Activism in Everyday Life: Caribbean Women’s Activism to Address Inequalities and End Domestic Violence.
Leah Cleghorn
Part Two: Activism and Contested Spaces
6- Civil Disobedience and the Fight to Open Drug Consumption Rooms in the UK.
Laura Garius and André Gomes
7- Street Art as Resistance: The Spread of Black Lives Matter Street Murals as a Form of Collective Protest.
David Todd Lawrence, Paul Lorah and Heather Shirey
8- Trust the Pilot: Accountability in Build-to-Rent Housing.
Sara Rodriguez
9- Protect Our Pubs!: The Crooked House, Grassroots Campaigning, and Heritage Pub Protection.
Bethan Poyser and Sam Poyser
Part Three: Digital Activism and Global Civic Engagement
10- New Horizons: Interactions Between Video Games and Activism.
Elliot Doornbos and Jordan Cashmore
11- Fan Power: How Music Fans Are Remixing Activism Online.
Tine Munk
12- Digital Resistance and the Power of Memes.
Khrystyna Monastyrska, Tine Munk and Ian Mahoney
13- The Fluidity of Civic Resistance and Activism.
Tine Munk, Elliot Doornbos and Ian Mahoney
Biography
Tine Munk is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Nottingham Trent University. She specialises in cybercrime, cybersecurity, and digital threats in political, war, and conflict contexts, with a particular focus on political attacks, actors, power relations, and memetic warfare.
Elliot Doornbos is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology in the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice at Nottingham Trent University. He is currently completing his doctorate, which focuses on the trafficking of whale shark fins. An interdisciplinary scholar, his research centres on green criminology, species justice, and transnational organised crime.
Ian Mahoney is a Senior Lecturer in Criminology and Deputy Director of the Centre for Crime, Offending, Prevention and Engagement (COPE) at Nottingham Trent University. His research adopts a cultural criminological lens and is currently focused around exploring memetic warfare, and understanding and addressing the harms and impacts of crime and contact with the justice system across diverse groups.






