1st Edition
Understanding and Preventing ‘Cuckooing’ Victimisation County Lines and Beyond
Series Editors’ Foreword
Jack Spicer and Mark Monaghan
Foreword
James Allen
Foreword
Anne Rannard
Introductory Note: Housing Unit Takeovers (HUTs): Experiences in Canada
Eric Weissman
1. Introduction: Cuckooing in Context
Amy Loughery
Part 1 Cuckooing in the context of county lines
2. County Lines and Exploitation in Drug Markets: Historical and Current Developments
Chris Devany and Tobias Kammersgaard
3. Communities of Practice in Multi-Agency Responses to Cuckooing
Rose Broad and Josh Findlay
4. Identification, Targeting, and Exploitation: Conceptualising Cuckooing as a Form of Adult Grooming
Laura Bainbridge and Amy Loughery
5. Women’s Experiences of County Lines-related Cuckooing in North Yorkshire
Isobel Clare and Amy Loughery
Part 2 Beyond County Lines
6. Reclaiming Cuckooing: Beyond County Lines
Laura Bainbridge, Rose Broad, and Amy Loughery
7. From Isolation to Invasion: Disability and Loneliness as Catalysts for Cuckooing
Stephen J Macdonald, Catherine Donovan, and John Clayton
8. Disability and Vulnerability
Alyson Norman
9. Housing and Cuckooing: The Role of Tenure in Framing Structural Vulnerability
Julie Rugg
10. Care Leavers and Cuckooing: Highlighting the Need to Belong
Julie Shaw and Steph Quinn
11. Concluding Thoughts
Laura Bainbridge and Rose Broad
Biography
Laura Bainbridge is an Associate Professor in Criminal Justice in the School of Law at the University of Leeds, UK. She is the founder and chair of the Cuckooing Research & Prevention Network and the UK Compulsory Sobriety Network. Laura’s scholarly interests lie at the nexus of social policy, criminology, and political science. She specialises in violence reduction and innovative qualitative research methods. Her recent research has explored cuckooing victimisation, child criminal exploitation in county lines and local drug markets, enforced alcohol abstinence, and cross-national policy imitation.
Rose Broad is a Professor of Criminology and is currently Head of the Department for Criminology at the University of Manchester, UK. Rose’s research interests include human trafficking, modern slavery, responses to violence, organised crime, the management of offenders, and prison education. Her recent research has explored consent, coercion, and fraud in human trafficking relationships and temporal measures of modern slavery victimisation. Rose’s background prior to academia was as a practitioner in criminal justice institutions, and she continues to maintain links with practitioners and policymakers, developing research into practice and research impact.
Amy Loughery is a Postdoctoral Researcher at the Vulnerability and Policing Futures Research Centre, University of Leeds, UK. Her research primarily focuses on criminal justice interventions that comprise both care and control of marginalised populations with dependence on drugs and/or alcohol. Amy is an active member of the Cuckooing Research & Prevention Network and was formerly a Research Fellow on an N8 Policing Research Partnership study and two Research England-funded projects dedicated to understanding, preventing, and disrupting cuckooing victimisation.






