Personal profile
Biography
Dr Aram Ghaemmaghami is a Senior Lecturer in Criminal Justice and Community Policing and the Course Leader for the MSc Cybercrime, Terrorism and Security. He is a co-lead on the Policing Partnership Exchange within the Police Centre of Academic Excellence, where he works with colleagues and policing organisations on research and knowledge exchange. He is also a member of the Hampshire and Isle of Wight Constabulary Force Strategic Independent Advisory Group (FSIAG), where he provides expert advice and idependent oversight over police operations within the force area. His earlier career in safeguarding and public health shapes the way he approaches questions of risk, vulnerability and institutional decision-making and continues to guide much of his academic work.
His research focuses on political violence, digital extremism and the development of extremist ideas in online environments. He examines how these ideas move between different digital spaces and how they influence belief and behaviour. This is linked to his broader work on countering violent extremism and on the pressures that fall on communities and institutions when these ideas begin to shape real-world actions. He also works on issues of race and police legitimacy and draws on this to explore how policing organisations respond to harm, public scrutiny and the need for trust.
Another strand of his work looks at the conditions under which sensitive research takes place. He studies the demands faced by researchers and practitioners who work with harmful material and works with colleagues across the University to strengthen systems that support safe and accountable research. This has informed ongoing development of researcher wellbeing frameworks and clearer processes for handling risk in high-pressure environments.
He contributes to joint projects on digital harm, policing practice and institutional response and plays a continuing role in doctoral development through international partnerships. Much of this activity centres on supporting researchers who work in sensitive areas and on building research cultures that can sustain complex inquiry.
Teaching Responsibilities
Aram teaches and coordinates core modules in research methods and social theory across the undergraduate programmes, and he also leads teaching on countering violent extremism practice; this connects directly with his wider research on political violence and extremism. He is the course leader for the MSc Cybercrime, Terrorism and Security, and he supervises students who work on topics such as terrorism and political violence. He is also passionate about decolonising the curriculum and works on bridging research and practice in relation to issues such as the BAME attainment gap. He also supervises several PhD projects, as well as numerous master's and undergraduate dissertations.
Research Interests
Aram is a post-colonial scholar that critically engages within the criminal justice system and policy landscape. His research interests include safeguarding, community resilience, communities 'at risk', race relations, police legitmacy, social media studies, online extremism, disinformation/misinformation online, and contemporary counter-terrorism/countering violent extremism practice.
Expertise related to UN Sustainable Development Goals
In 2015, UN member states agreed to 17 global Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to end poverty, protect the planet and ensure prosperity for all. This person’s work contributes towards the following SDG(s):
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SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
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Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
Research output
- 5 Article
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Delegated safeguarding or surveillance by proxy? Education: the prevent statutory duty in action
Ghaemmaghami, A. R. & Jabbar, N., 1 Sept 2023, In: International Journal of Law, Crime and Justice. 74, 100604.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile48 Downloads (Pure) -
‘Giving the right service to different people’: revisiting police legitimacy in the Covid-19 era
Charman, S., Newiss, G., Smith, P., Inkpen, R., Ilett, C., Ghaemmaghami, A. R. & Bennett, S., 8 Sept 2022, (Early online) In: Policing and Society.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile157 Downloads (Pure) -
“Othering” by consent? Public attitudes to Covid-19 restrictions and the role of the police in managing compliance in England
Inkpen, R., Charman, S., Ghaemmaghami, A. R., Smith, P., Newiss, G., Bennett, S. & Ilett, C., 10 May 2022, (Early online) In: The Sociological Quarterly . 22 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile106 Downloads (Pure) -
Responding to the public during a pandemic: perceptions of ‘satisfactory’ and ‘unsatisfactory’ policing
Ghaemmaghami, A. R., Inkpen, R., Charman, S., Ilett, C., Bennett, S., Smith, P. & Newiss, G., 6 Sept 2021, (Early online) In: Policing.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile111 Downloads (Pure) -
Taking the strain? Police wellbeing in the Covid-19 era
Newiss, G., Charman, S., Ilett, C., Bennett, S., Ghaemmaghami, A. R., Smith, P. & Inkpen, R., 25 Sept 2021, (Early online) In: The Police Journal. 21 p.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open AccessFile288 Downloads (Pure)
Thesis
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Delegated safeguarding or surveillance by proxy?: the problem with Prevent – a critical discourse analysis of community-level counterradicalisation strategy
Ghaemmaghami, A. R. (Author), Jabbar, N. (Supervisor), Stoddard, E. J. A. (Supervisor) & Norman, P. (Supervisor), Sept 2020Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis
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Projects
- 1 Active
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A Policing Academic Centre of Excellence
Charman, S. (PI), Button, M. (CoI), De La Fuente, A. (CoI), Earwaker, H. (CoI), Ghaemmaghami, A. (CoI), Harding, S. (CoI), Hock, B. (CoI), Karagiannopoulos, V. (CoI), Meenaghan, A. (CoI), Milne, B. (CoI), Smith, P. (CoI), Tyson, J. (CoI) & Newiss, G. (Team Member)
1/10/25 → 30/09/28
Project: Research