Other Publications
Phil’s research has focused on anti-social behaviour and the governance of public space, with a particular interest in the regulation and policing of the 'night-time economy' and in developing cross-cultural comparative research links in these fields.
Major Research Reports
Hadfield, P. (2009) Alcohol Needs Assessment in Middlesbrough: The Crime Dimension, report to Alcohol Concern.
Hadfield, P., Lister, S., and Traynor, P. (2009) Alcohol Insights: The Orientation and Integration of Local and National Alcohol Policy, London: Alcohol Education Research Council. Click here to view
Hadfield, P. (2009) Review of Statement of Licensing Policy: Report 3, Proposed City Stress Area Observational Analysis- Summer Period Comparative Report. London: City of London.
Hadfield, P. (2009) Review of Statement of Licensing Policy: Report 2, Comparative Analysis of Statements of Licensing Policy. London: City of London.
Hadfield, P. (2009) Review of Statement of Licensing Policy: Report 1, Proposed City Stress Area Observational Analysis. London: City of London.
KPMG LLP/Home Office (2008) Review of the Social Responsibility Standards for the Production and Sale of Alcoholic Drinks. Birmingham: KPMG LLP (contributing author). Click here to view
Elvins, M. and Hadfield, P. (2003) West End ‘Stress Area’ Night-Time Economy Profiling: A Demonstration Project: Final Report to the City of Westminster. School of Applied Social Sciences: University of Durham.
Click here to download
Peer reviewed journal articles
Hadfield, P., Lister, S., and Traynor, P. (2009) ‘This Town’s A Different Town Today: Policing and Regulating the Night-time Economy’, Criminology and Criminal Justice. 9/4: 465-85 (with open access). http://crj.sagepub.com/cgi/reprint/9/4/465
Hadfield, P. (2009) ‘Too Hard to Bear? : People and Large Carnivores in Slovakia’, ECOS: A Review of Conservation, 30/2: 76-84.
Hadfield, P. and Measham, F. (2009) 'Shaping the Night: How Licensing, Social Divisions, and Informal Social Controls, Mould the Form and Content of Nightlife' Crime Prevention and Community Safety. An International Journal, 11/3: 219–34.
Hadfield, P. (2008) ‘'From Threat to Promise: Nightclub 'Security', Governance and Consumer Elites', British Journal of Criminology, 48, 429-47.
Hadfield, P. (2007) ‘A Hard Act to Follow: Assessing the Consequences of Licensing Reform in England and Wales’, Editorial, Addiction, 102: 177-80.
Hobbs, D., Hadfield, P., Lister, S. and Winlow, S. (2005) ‘Violence and Control in the Night-Time Economy’, European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, 13/1: 89-102.
Hobbs, D., Hadfield, P., Lister, S. and Winlow, S. (2005) ‘Violent Hypocrisy: Post Industrialism and the Night-time Economy’, European Journal of Criminology. 2/2:161-83.
Hobbs, D., Hadfield, P., Lister, S. and Winlow, S. (2002) ‘Door Lore: The Art and Economics of Intimidation,’ British Journal of Criminology, 42, 352-70 (Winner of the Radzinowicz Memorial Prize 2003).
Lister, S., Hadfield, P., Hobbs, D. and Winlow, S. (2001) ‘Accounting for Bouncers: Occupational Licensing as a Mechanism for Regulation,’ Criminal Justice, 1/4: 363-84.
Winlow, S., Hobbs, D., Lister, S. and Hadfield, P. (2001) ‘Get Ready to Duck: Bouncers and the Realities of Ethnographic Research on Violent Groups’, British Journal of Criminology, Special Issue: Methodological Dilemmas of Research, 41/3: 536-48.
Hobbs, D., Lister, S., Hadfield. P., Winlow, S. and Hall, S. (2000) ‘Receiving Shadows: Governance and Liminality in the Night-time Economy’, British Journal of Sociology, 51/4: 701-17.