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Dive into the research topics where Carol Quadrelli is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Carol Quadrelli.


Journal of Intercultural Studies | 2015

Scrutinising the Other: Incapacity, Suspicion and Manipulation in a Death Investigation

Belinda Carpenter; Gordon Tait; Carol Quadrelli; John Drayton

In common law countries like England, Australia, the USA and Canada, certain deaths come to be investigated through the coronial system. These include sudden, unnatural or suspicious deaths as well as those which appear to be the result of naturally occurring disease but the precise cause is unknown. When a reportable death occurs in Australia, a number of professional groups become involved in its investigation – police, coroners, pathologists and counsellors. While research has demonstrated the importance of training and education for staff in the context of criminal investigations – with its over-representation of vulnerable and marginalised populations – this is less likely to occur in the context of death investigations, despite such investigations also involving the over-representation of vulnerable populations. This paper, part of larger funded research on the decision-making of coronial professionals in the context of cultural and religious difference, explores the ways in which cultural and religious minority groups – in this case Islam, Judaism and Indigeneity – become differently positioned during the death investigation based upon how they are perceived as ‘other’. Our research raises three issues. First, positioning as ‘the other’ is dependent on the professional training of the staff member, with police and pathologists far more likely than coroners to be suspicious or ignorant of difference. Second, specific historical and contemporary events effect the Othering of religious and cultural difference. Third, the grieving practices associated with religious and cultural difference can be collectively Othered through their perceived opposition to modernity.


Policing & Society | 2016

Investigating death: the emotional and cultural challenges for police

Belinda Carpenter; Gordon Tait; Carol Quadrelli; Ian Thompson

The over-representation of vulnerable populations within the criminal justice system, and the role of police in perpetuating this, has long been a topic of discussion in criminology. What is less discussed is the way in which non-criminal investigations by police, in areas like a death investigation, may similarly disadvantage and discriminate against vulnerable populations. In Australia, as elsewhere, it is police who are responsible for investigating both suspicious and violent deaths like homicide as well as non-suspicious, violent deaths like accidents and suicides. Police are also the agents tasked with investigating deaths, which are neither violent nor suspicious but occur outside hospitals and other care facilities. This paper, part of a larger funded Australian research project focusing on the ways in which cultural and religious differences are dealt with during the death investigation process, reports on how police describe – or are described by others – during their role in a non-suspicious death investigation, and the challenges that such investigations raise for police and policing. The employment of police liaison officers is discussed as one response to the difficulty of policing cultural and religious difference with variable results.


Crime & Justice Research Centre; Faculty of Law; School of Justice | 1996

Flexibility, Technology and Academics' Practices : Tantalising Tales and Muddy Maps

Peter G. Taylor; Lucy Lopez; Carol Quadrelli


Religion | 2014

The Body in Grief: Death Investigations, Objections to Autopsy, and the Religious and Cultural ‘Other’

Belinda Carpenter; Gordon Tait; Carol Quadrelli


Archive | 2003

Aberrance, agency and social constructions of women offenders

Carol Quadrelli


Crime & Justice Research Centre; Faculty of Education; Faculty of Law; Australian Centre for Health Law Research | 2013

Arguing the Autopsy : mutual suspicion, jurisdictional confusion and the socially marginal

Belinda Carpenter; Gordon Tait; Carol Quadrelli


Faculty of Education | 2001

Women Inmates' Accounts of Education in Queensland Corrections 1

Ann Farrell; Susan J. Danby; Petra V. Skoien; Carol Quadrelli


Division of Technology, Information and Library Services | 2017

Higher degree research students at the centre of transformational practice: An evidence based approach

Jenny Hall; Carol Quadrelli; Annette Sondergeld


Faculty of Education; Faculty of Law | 2016

Decision-making in a death investigation: Emotions, families and the coroner

Gordon Tait; Belinda Carpenter; Carol Quadrelli


Crime & Justice Research Centre; Faculty of Education; Faculty of Law | 2016

Investigating death: The emotional and cultural challenges for police

Belinda Carpenter; Gordon Tait; Carol Quadrelli; Ian Thompson

Collaboration


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Belinda Carpenter

Queensland University of Technology

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Gordon Tait

Queensland University of Technology

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Ann Farrell

Queensland University of Technology

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Susan J. Danby

Queensland University of Technology

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Jenny Hall

University of Queensland

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Charles Naylor

Ludwig Institute for Cancer Research

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