Jo Phoenix

Professor of criminology

Jo is a professor of criminology. For as long as she has been a professional academic, she has been interested in sex, gender, sexualities and youth; she has spent more than 20 years researching women, young people, crime and justice. She is the author of several books and articles on prostitution, prostitution policy reform, child sexual exploitation, academic ethics and professionalism and youth justice. In 2024, she won a significant victory in the employment tribunal court against her former employer, the Open University, for harassment, discrimination and constructive dismissal on gender-critical belief grounds. As well as advocating for women’s rights, she is also an advocate for academic freedom and freedom of speech.

“I came out as a lesbian in Texas in the late 1980s. I moved to England a year after Greenham Peace Camp was established. I learned politics through a feminist lens and have spent a lifetime fighting for justice for women and children. Although societies shape us from the day we are born, we come into this world and live within it as biological beings. This means that we have a sex, we age and we die. At present, we live in a society structured by profound class, sex and age based inequalities. Sex matters because it shapes where we are in relation to those inequalities.”