Dr Diana Batchelor (she/her)
School of Law
Leverhulme Early Career Fellow in Criminology
Full contact details
School of Law
AG12
Bartolome虂 House
Winter Street
葫芦影业
S3 7ND
- Profile
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Diana is a criminologist with training in experimental and forensic psychology. Her current research explores victim-survivors鈥 understanding of the causes of crime. The project is funded by the Leverhulme Trust, and is based in the UK and Indonesia (2023-2026).
Diana has worked in criminal justice and conflict resolution in the UK, South Africa, and Lebanon, in roles ranging from frontline support work to evaluation, research and policy development. Her practical experience inspires her to design academic research with real-world impact.
During her ESRC-funded PhD, Diana conducted both qualitative and quantitative empirical studies on victim-survivor experiences of restorative justice processes. She collaborated with service delivery organisations to produce guidance for practitioners, service-users, and the public, as well as peer-reviewed journal articles.
The current research project began because people who have been victimised often ask 鈥渨hy?鈥: why the crime happened or why they were targeted. Yet we know little about people鈥檚 own answers to such questions, and about how these thought processes affect (or are affected by) their views of justice and their recovery. Diana is working alongside partners in both the UK and Indonesia to find out. This international, collaborative approach will provide insight into how beliefs about the causes of victimisation relate to victim-survivor experiences in two different legal and cultural contexts. The project will enhance our broad understanding of human reasoning and views of moral responsibility, while also contributing lessons for the development of resilience and the implementation of justice.
Beyond her current project, Diana鈥檚 research interests also include: formal and informal relationships between victim-survivors and offenders; the experiences of people who have been both victims and offenders; disputed conceptions of victimhood and victim-blaming; perceptions and meanings of 鈥榡ustice鈥; the effects of the criminal justice system on those involved in it; and methodological questions at the intersection of psychology, sociology and law, including the implications of the so-called 鈥榬eplication crisis鈥 for criminology and victimology.
- Qualifications
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- PhD, Centre for Criminology, University of Oxford
- MSc, Forensic Psychology, University of Middlesex
- MA, International Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame
- BA, Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford
- Research interests
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- Victimisation, resilience and recovery
- Perceptions of justice
- Attributions of causality and blame
- The victim-offender overlap
- Alternative and informal justice mechanisms
- Post-conflict justice
- Publications
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Journal articles
- . Journal of Interpersonal Violence, 38(5-6), 4877-4905.
- . Punishment & Society, 25(2), 519-536.
- . The International Journal of Restorative Justice, 1(2), 175-186.
- . Restorative Justice, 5(2), 332-335.
- . Victims & Offenders, 12(2), 205-232.
- . Journal of Law and Religion, 20(2), 525-525.
- . Psychology, Public Policy, and Law, 29(2), 169-181.