Hannah E. Britton
- Professor
- Director, Center for the Study of Injustice, Institute for Policy and Social Research
- Political Science
- Women, Gender & Sexuality Studies
Contact Info
Lawrence
1541 Lilac Lane
Lawrence, KS 66045
Biography —
Hannah Britton is a professor in the departments of political science and women, gender, and sexuality studies. Britton's scholarship focuses on women and politics, gender and African politics, the prevention of gender-based violence, and human trafficking. Britton is the Director of the Center for the Study of Injustice at the Institute of Policy & Social Research at the University of Kansas. Britton also coordinates a working group of faculty and graduate students using qualitative research methods in their teaching and scholarship.
For the past twenty years, my research has focused on the intersection of gender, sexuality, nationality, and ethnicity as factors affecting social status, political power, and violence prevention. Much of my early scholarship focused on improving the socio-economic and political position of women in post-conflict settings, in particular in southern Africa. More recently, my work examines how individuals and communities address the factors affecting (1) human trafficking, including sex and labor exploitation and (2) intimate-partner violence and gender-based violence. My thirty years of field-based research in South Africa and Namibia, and my more recent work in the Midwest U.S., provide a wealth of experience in designing community-based research projects. My primary research methodology has been field-based research in both rural and urban settings, and I have employed a range of qualitative research methods including interview research, focus group research, participant observation, document analysis, and content analysis. Through this field-based research, I have extensive knowledge of reaching hidden populations, of working in urban and rural areas, of establishing networks of community partners, and of designing researcher and participant safety measures.
Education —
Research —
For the past twenty years, my research has focused on the intersection of gender, sexuality, nationality, and ethnicity as factors affecting social status, political power, and violence prevention. Much of my early scholarship focused on improving the socio-economic and political position of women in post-conflict settings, in particular in southern Africa. More recently, my work examines how individuals and communities address the risk, protective, and resiliency factors affecting (1) human trafficking, including sex and labor exploitation and (2) intimate-partner violence and gender-based violence. My twenty years of field-based research in South Africa and Namibia and my more recent work in the Midwest U.S. provide a wealth of experience in designing community-based research projects. My primary research methodology has been field-based research in both rural and urban settings, and I have employed a range of qualitative research methods including interview research, focus group research, participant observation, document analysis, and content analysis. Through this field-based research, I have extensive knowledge of reaching hidden populations, of working in urban and rural areas, of establishing networks of community partners, and of designing researcher and participant safety measures.
Research interests:
- Comparative Politics
- Gender and Politics
- African Politics
- Human Trafficking
Teaching —
Teaching interests:
- Comparative Politics
- African Politics
- Gender and Politics
- Human Trafficking
- Qualitative Methods
- Feminist Theory
Selected Publications —
Bernard Schuster, Hannah Britton, Hyunjin Seo, Darcey Altschwager, Eli Booton, Marilyn Ault, Joi Wickliffe & Megha Ramaswamy (2022). “’I Don’t Just Take Whatever They Hand to Me’: How Women Recently Released from Incarceration Access Internet Health Information,” Women & Criminal Justice, DOI: 10.1080/08974454.2022.2040692
Seo, H., Altschwager, D., Choi, B-Y., Song, S., Britton, H., Ramaswamy, M., Schuster, B., Ault, M., Ayinala, K. Zaman, R., Tihen, B., & Yenugu, L. (2021). “Informal technology education for women transitioning from incarceration.” ACM Transactions on Computing Education. 21(2), 1-16. https://doi.org/10.1145/3425711
Britton, Hannah E. (2020). Ending Gender-Based Violence: Justice and Community in South Africa. University of Illinois Press.
Schwarz, C. Kennedy, E. & Britton, H. (2017). 'Sliding Backwards': Structural Injustice, Sex Work, and Human Trafficking. Feminist Formations, 29(2), 1-25.
Schwarz, C. Unruh, E. Cronin, K. Evans-Simpson, S. Britton, H. & Ramaswamy, M. (2016). Human Trafficking Identification and Service Provision in the Medical and Social Service Sectors. Health and Human Rights, 18(1), 181-191.
Schwarz, C. & Britton, H. E. (2014). "Queering the Support for Trafficked Persons: LGBTQ Communities and Human Trafficking in the Heartland.". Social Inclusion, 3(1), 63-75.
Britton, H. E., & Dean, L. (2014). Policy Responses to Human Trafficking in Southern Africa: Domesticating International Norms. Human Rights Review, 15(3), 305-328.
Britton, H. E., & Shook, L. (2014). 'I Need to Hurt Your More': Namibia's Fight to End Gender-Based Violence. Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 40(1), 153-175.
Britton, H. E., & Price, T. (2013). 'If Good Food Is Cooked in One Country, We Will All Eat From It': Women and Civil Society in Africa. In . (Ed.), The Handbook of Civil Society in Africa.
Britton, H. E., & Fish, J. N. (2009). Engendering Civil Society Society in the Democratic South Africa. In H. E. Britton, S. Meintjes, & J. N. Fish (Eds.), Women's Activism in South Africa: Working Across Divides. University of KwaZulu Natal Press.
Britton, H. (2009). Women's Activism in South Africa: Working Across Divides (H. E. Britton, S. Meintjes, & J. N. Fish, Eds.). University of KwaZulu Natal Press.
Britton, H. E. (2008). South Africa: Challenging Traditional Thinking on Electoral Systems. In M. Tremblay (Ed.), Women and Legislative Representation: Electoral Systems, Political Parties and Sex Quotas. Palgrave.
Britton, H. E. (2006). South Africa: Mainstreaming Gender in a New Democracy. In G. Bauer & H. E. Britton (Eds.), Women in African Parliaments. Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Britton, H. E. (2006). Trading Places: Juxtaposing South Africa and the United States. In R. Riley & N. Inayatullah (Eds.), Interrogating Imperialism: Conversations on Gender, Race and War. Palgrave.
Britton, H. E., & Bauer, G. (2006). Women in African Parliaments: A Continental Shift? In G. Bauer & H. E. Britton (Eds.), Women in African Parliaments. Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Britton, H. E. & Bauer, G. (Eds.). (2006). Women in African Parliaments (H. E. Britton & G. Bauer, Eds.). Lynne Rienner Publishers.
Britton, H. E. (2006). Organizing Against Gender Violence in South Africa. Journal of South African Studies, 32(1), 145-163.
Britton, H. E. (2005). Women in the South African Parliament: From Resistance to Governance, University of Illinois Press.
Britton, H. E. (2002). Coalition Building, Election Rules, and Party Politics: South African Women's Path to Parliament. Africa Today, 49(4), 32-67.
Britton, H. E. (2002). The Incomplete Revolution: South African Women's Continued Search for Liberation. International Feminist Journal of Politics, 4(1), 1-29.
Britton, H. E. (2001). New Struggles, New Strategies: Emerging Patterns of Women's Political Participation in the South African Parliament. International Politics, 38(2), 173-199.
Service —
Hannah Britton is the Director of the Center for the Study of Injustice and the Director of the Anti-Slavery and Human Trafficking Initiative at KU.