Published work arising from the ESRC Violence Research Programme: ‘Bouncers: The Art and Economics of Intimidation’ (Project number L133251050), University of Durham -1997-2002.
Phil Hadfield, (2002) ‘Open All Hours?’ Police Review, 16 August: 110/5686: 21.
Phil Hadfield, Stuart Lister, Dick Hobbs and Simon Winlow (2001) ‘The “24-Hour
City”- Condition Critical?’ Town and Country Planning, 70/11, November: 300-
302 (and re-printed in Alcohol Alert, 2002, issue 1).
Phil Hadfield, Stuart Lister, Dick Hobbs and Simon Winlow (2002) ‘Location,
Location, Location: Preventing Alcohol-related Crime and Disorder via
Development Controls,’ Criminal Justice Matters, Special Issue on Drugs, 47,
Spring: 34-35.
Dick Hobbs, Phil Hadfield, Stuart Lister and Simon Winlow (2002)
‘Door Lore: The Art and Economics of Intimidation,’ British Journal of
Criminology, 42/2: 352-370.
Dick Hobbs, Phil Hadfield, Stuart Lister and Simon Winlow (2003) Bouncers:
Violence and Governance in the Night-time Economy, Oxford: Oxford
University Press.
Dick Hobbs, Phil Hadfield, Stuart Lister and Simon Winlow (2005) ‘Violence and
Control in the Night-time Economy,’ European Journal of Crime, Criminal Law
and Criminal Justice,(January 2005, 13/1: 89-102.
Dick Hobbs, Stuart Lister, Phil Hadfield, Simon Winlow and Steve Hall (2000)
‘Receiving Shadows: Governance and Liminality in the Night-time Economy,’
British Journal of Sociology, 51/4: 701-717.
Dick Hobbs., Winlow, S., Hadfield, P. and Lister, S. (2005) ‘Violent Hypocrisy:
Governance and the Night-time Economy,’ European Journal of Criminology, 2/2:
161-183 (March/April 2005).
Dick Hobbs, Simon Winlow, Stuart Lister and Phil Hadfield (2000) ‘After Dark:
Bouncers, Policing and the Night-time Economy,’ Safer Society, 7, December: 14-
15.
Stuart Lister, (2001) ‘Closing Time for Crime and Disorder,’ Police Review, 30
November, 109ii (5650): 20-21.
Stuart Lister, (2002) ‘Violence as a Commercial Resource: Situating Bouncers and the
Use of Force in Context,’ Journal of Forensic Psychiatry, 12: 2.
Stuart Lister, Phil Hadfield, Dick Hobbs and Simon Winlow (2001a)
‘Accounting for Bouncers: Occupational Licensing as a Mechanism for
Regulation,’ Criminal Justice, 1/4: 363-384.
Stuart Lister, Phil Hadfield, Dick Hobbs and Simon Winlow (2001b) ‘Be
Nice: The Training of Bouncers’ Criminal Justice Matters, Special Issue on
Training, 45, Autumn: 20-21.
Stuart Lister, Dick Hobbs, Phil Hadfield and Simon Winlow (2001) Policing the
Night-time Economy in Eastville, University of Durham Working Paper.
Stuart Lister, Dick Hobbs, Steve Hall and Simon Winlow (2000) ‘Violence in the
Night time Economy; Bouncers: The Reporting, Recording and Prosecution of
Assaults,’ Policing and Society, 10: 383: 402.
Simon Winlow, Dick Hobbs, Stuart Lister and Phil Hadfield (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: 536-548.
Simon Winlow, Dick Hobbs, Stuart Lister and Phil Hadfield (2002) ‘Bouncers
and the Social Context of Violence: Masculinity, Class and Violence in the Night-
time Economy’ in Elizabeth Stanko (ed.) The Meanings of Violence: Volume 1,
London: Routledge.