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Overview

Professor Tammi Walker

Principal of St Cuthbert’s Society and Professor of Forensic Psychology


Affiliations
Affiliation
Principal of St Cuthbert’s Society and Professor of Forensic Psychology in the Department of Psychology
Principal of St Cuthbert's Society
Associate Fellow in the Institute of Advanced Study
Fellow of the Wolfson Research Institute for Health and Wellbeing
Fellow of the Institute for Medical Humanities

Biography

Tammi Walker is Professor of Forensic Psychology in the Department of Psychology and Principal of St Cuthbert’s Society at Durham University. She is a Fellow and a Chartered Psychologist of the British Psychological Society, a Registered Senior Fellow with Advance HE and has a visiting position at the University of Manchester. 

Her research focuses on adults, particularly women, in contact with prisons and forensic mental health services who have Multiple Long-Term Conditions. Specifically, severe mental illness, physical health conditions and addictions issues. 

Tammi currently leads several large grants that aim to reduce health disparities and inequalities but also improve the overall health of these communities adopting mixed methods research designs. She has a multidisciplinary approach to her research, incorporating perspectives from public health, psychiatry, primary care, criminology, and medical humanities.

She is an invited member of the Ministry of Justice Women in Criminal Justice System Expert Group and His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Probation and Prisons expert reference group for the joint thematic inspection of the quality of work undertaken with women. See this link for futher details: https://www.durham.ac.uk/staff/tammi-walker/

Tammi is currently working as series editor on: New Frontiers in Forensic Psychology for Routledge. These short, co-authored books provide insight into new areas of investigation in forensic psychology, or new perspectives on existing topics of enquiry. See link: https://www.routledge.com/New-Frontiers-in-Forensic-Psychology/book-series/NFFP

She co-authored 'Criminal Women' (2022: Bristol University Press), 'Tackling Sexual Violence at Universities: An International Perspective' (2019: Routledge Press) and was the lead author of 'Preventing Self-injury and Suicide in Women's Prisons' (2016: Waterside Press), which won the national British Psychological Society Book Award 2017 for Best Practitioner Text.

Selected Awarded Grants

2024: NIHR [RfPB]: Improving Services for Imprisoned Women with Severe Mental Illness [IPSIS]. Principal Investigator.

2023: HTA Programme: Women Offenders Repeat Self-Harm Intervention Pragmatic Trial: WORSHIP III. Co-Investigator. With Manchester University.

2022: UK Universities: UK-Ukraine R&I twinning grants scheme form. Multidisciplinary approaches to building research capacity and resilence through partnership during conflict. Co-Investigator.

2021: NIHR [RfPB]: Increasing Physical Activity in a Medium Secure Service: The Development and Feasibility of a Physical ACTivity Intervention [IMPACT]. Principal Investigator.

2021: NIHR: WHOLE-SMI - Wellbeing And HOListic Health Promotion For People With Severe Mental Illness. Co-Investigator. With Newcastle University.

2021: NIHR [ARC NENC]: Heroin Assisted Treatment Intervention (HATI): A qualitative exploration. Principal Investigator.

 

 

 

Research interests

  • Forensic mental health issues and women in contact with the criminal justice system
  • Inequalities in mental and physical health among forensic populations
  • Multiple Long-Term Conditions among forensic populations
  • Addictions - Drugs and Alcohol Services in Education and NHS

Publications

Authored book

Chapter in book

Edited book

Journal Article

Supervision students