Dr Deirdre Duffy
Senior Lecturer in Sociology (Global Social Inequalities)Research Overview
Deirdre Duffy is a sociologist and applied social scientist. She has a specific interest in governance, resistance, and inequities. Her work primarily focuses on reproductive (in)justice, abortion access, and abortion activism. She explores these topics in a range of geographic and political contexts in the Global North and Global South and they are the subject of her monograph Abortion Trail Activism: The Global Infrastructures for Abortion Access (Bloomsbury, 2024).
Dr Duffy is passionate about 'research for policy' and the transformative potential of social policy research (the focus of her 2017 monograph Evaluation and Governing in the 21st Century: Disciplinary Measures, Transformative Possibilities, Palgrave Studies in Science, Knowledge and Policy). She has actively contributed to processes intent on minimising inequities in abortion access through legal and political reform in Colombia and (Northern) Ireland.
Research Interests
- Reproductive (in)justice
- Abortion access and activisms
- Gender and health inequalities
- Evaluation and 'research for policy'
Current Teaching
- SOCL208 Gender and Intersecting Inequalities
My Role
Co-Director of Education
Department Impact Lead
Selected Publications
ENRIGHT, M., DUFFY, D. 31/12/2022 In: Journal of Law and Society. 49, 4, p. 753-777. 25 p.
Journal article
Daigle, M., Duffy, D.N., Casta?eda, D.L. 5/07/2022 In: International Affairs. 98, 4, p. 1423-1448. 26 p.
Journal article
Duffy, D., Mishtal, J., Grimes, L., Murphy, M., Reeves, K., Chakravarty, D., Chavkin, W., Favier, M., Horgan, P., Stifani, B., Lavelanet, A.F. 30/09/2022 In: SSM - Population Health. 19, 8 p.
Journal article
Duffy, D.N. 1/03/2020 In: Feminist Review. 124, 1, p. 69-85. 17 p.
Journal article
All Publications
01/04/2022 → 30/10/2022
Consultancy
01/09/2020 → 28/02/2022
Research
01/04/2020 → 30/09/2021
Research
01/03/2016 → 31/08/2017
Research
Participation in conference -Mixed Audience
- Centre for Child and Family Justice Research