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Overview

Professor Cassandra Phoenix

Professor


Affiliations
Affiliation
Professor in the Department of Sport and Exercise Sciences
Fellow of the Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing
Lead of Moving Bodies Lab in DRP-MH in the Institute for Medical Humanities

Biography

Cassandra is internationally recognised for developing innovative, interdisciplinary approaches to understand people's lived experiences of physical activity. She works across two key research strands - Healthy Ageing, and Nature, Health and Wellbeing, and leads the Moving Bodies Lab, as part of the Wellcome funded Discovery Research Platform for Medical Humanities.

Cassandra has an ongoing research interest in physical activity - or moving bodies - in relation to experiences of health and wellbeing across time and space.

This work has been developed through, for example, projects exploring how sport and movement in later life can become a vehicle through which ageism is both resisted and reinforced. It has also examined how chronic conditions often diagnosed in mid and later life (e.g. Ménière’s disease, characterised by symptoms of severe vertigo, tinnitus / hearing loss), and/or disability (e.g. late onset sight loss) can recalibrate experiences of movement in everyday life. Cassandra is currently leading a programme of research to advance knowledge of what it means to move through menopause

Cassandra's interest in moving bodies also extends to the spaces and places that bodies move in and through. This has involved how people engage and connect with “natural environments” when seeking health and wellbeing (via a focus on weather elements, pollution, blue/green spaces), and the ways in which this is shaped and constrained by broader social forces and inequalities. This line of research is also examining how older bodies move, and could be supported to move more, in confined spaces such as prison environments.

Through her research Cassandra seeks to work in partnerships and across disciplines to ask different questions of moving bodies. The answers, while often nuanced, can enrich our response to the seemingly intractable problem for planetary health of rising levels of physical inactivity and sedentary practices. 

Cassandra's research has been supported by a range of funders, including UKRI, Wellcome, World Health Organization, NIHR, Leverhulme, The Nuffield Foundation, along with a range of Charities and partnership organisations. It has helped guide campaigns, policy and practice from the highest level (WHO) to national (AgeUK) and regional levels (County Durham Sport).

Research interests

  • I would be keen to hear from prospective PhD students, particularly those interested in Women's Health; Ageing; Nature, Health & Wellbeing; Sport Mobilities.
  • I favour qualitative methodologies and work across different disciplines and fields including sport and exercise sciences, health geography, and medical humanities.

Esteem Indicators

  • 2024: MRes Sport and Exercise Rehabilitation Programme (University of Leeds):
  • 2023: Honorary Associate: The Gilbrea Centre for Studies in Aging, McMaster University
  • 2022: MA Cultures and Environments of Health (University of Exeter):
  • 2019: Methods in Psychology (Editorial Board Member):
  • 2016: Qualitative Research in Sport, Exercise and Health (Editorial Board Member):
  • 2014: Journal of Aging Studies (Editorial Board Member):

Publications

Chapter in book

Edited book

Journal Article

Report

Supervision students