Publications.

 

Books & Monographs.

Books are the backbone of my work. Analytical, intense, hopefully rewarding. More here.

2020: Studying Situational Interaction

2017: Why Monitoring Doesn’t Matter

2012: Breaking Rules

Reports & Articles

-      Hardie, B., Drew, C., (2024). Effective behaviour management via moral development within strong moral contexts: Researcher-Practitioner development of SATNAV, a comprehensive new programme of change for schools. (Short version published in Schools Week; April 2024)

-      Rose, C., Nandavar, S., Hardie, B., Watson, B., & Watson, A. (2022). Re-evaluating speeding behaviour among ACT drivers: An action theory approach. Report for the Australian Capital Territory Road Safety Fund.

Papers.

- Hardie, B. (2024).Supervision, presence and knowledge: Clarifying ‘parental monitoring’ concepts within a model of goal-directed parental action. Theory & Society, xx.

- Hardie, B. (2022). What do parents do? Towards conceptual clarity in the study of parental influence on adolescent behavioural outcomes. New Ideas in Psychology, 66.

-       Hardie, B. (2021). Reconceptualising parental monitoring within a model of goal-directed parental action. New Ideas in Psychology, 61.

-       Hardie, B (2021). Why monitoring doesn’t always matter: The interaction of personal propensity with physical and psychological parental presence in a situational explanation of adolescent offending. Deviant Behavior, 42(3), 329-352 (online first 2019).

-       Wikström, P-O H., Mann, R., & Hardie, B. (2018). Young people's differential vulnerability to criminogenic exposure. In J. Reinecke & H. Hirtenlehner (Eds.), European Journal of Criminology: Special issue on testing Situational Action Theory 15(1), 10-31.

-       Hirtenlehner, H., & Hardie, B. (2016). On the conditional relevance of controls: an application of Situational Action Theory to shoplifting. Deviant Behavior, 37(3), 315-331.

-       Wikström, P-O H., Treiber, K., Hardie, B., & Oberwittler, D. (2015). Felsons’s review of “Breaking Rules”: Smoke and mirrors. Journal of Criminal Justice Education, 26(1), 115-116.

-       Wikström, P-O H., Ceccato, V., Hardie, B., & Treiber, K. (2010). Activity fields and the dynamics of crime: Advancing knowledge about the role of the environment in crime causation. Journal of Quantitative Criminology, 26(1), 55-87. (Citations: 262).


In Slovenian language:

-       Bertok, E., Wikström, P-O H., Hardie, B., & Meško, G. (2012). Parental control of teenagers in primary and high school and related deviance. Journal of Criminal Investigation and Criminology/Ljubljana, 63, 4.

Chapters.

Book chapters allow the detail required to explain the Space-Time Budget methodology:

-       Hardie, B., & Wikström, P.-O. H. (2021). Space-Time Budget methodology: Facilitating social ecology of crime. In J. C. Barnes & D. R. Forde (Eds.), Encyclopedia of research methods and statistical techniques in Criminology and Criminal Justice. Wiley. (author accepted version here)

-       Wikström, P-O H., Treiber, K., & Hardie, B. (2012). Examining the role of the environment in crime causation: small-area community surveys and space-time budgets. In D. Gadd,S. Karstedt, & S. F. Messner (Eds.), The SAGE handbook of criminological research methods. SAGE.

Republished chapters

-        Wikström, P-O H., Oberwittler, D., Treiber, K., & Hardie, B. (2015). Situational Action Theory. Chapter 1 of Breaking Rules book republished in McGee, T., & Mazerolle, P. (Eds.), Developmental and life-course criminological theories. Ashgate Publishing.

-        Wikström, P-O H., Ceccato, V., Hardie, B., & Treiber, K. (2011). Activity fields and the dynamics of crime: Advancing knowledge about the role of the environment in crime causation. 2010 JQC article republished in Natarajan, M. (Eds.), Crime opportunity theories: Routine activity, rational choice and their variants. Ashgate Press.

 

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