Sheila Quaid is Senior Lecturer in Sociology and Gender at the University of Sunderland. She has been awarded a Senior Fellowship and a National Teaching Fellowship by Advance HE in recognition of her expertise in teaching and learning. Her research and teaching include critical pedagogies, gender, sexuality and family studies, discomforting pedagogies and teacher narratives of teaching diversity and difference, situated emotionality in research and professional practice. She is currently completing research on the lives and experiences of women who are not mothers. She has previously published work on domestic violence, lesbian motherhood, feminism, fatherhood and masculinity. Her PhD thesis was entitled Finding a Place: Negotiating Lesbian Parental Identities. Catriona Hugman is Lecturer in Social Sciences at Liverpool Hope University. Her PhD thesis, entitled ‘What’s the story? Sociological explorations of the life course narratives of care experienced adults’, examined the biographical narratives of adults who spent time growing up in state care. Of particular interest to her are teaching and research activities relating to biographical methods, storytelling and narratives, family, critical theory and processes of marginalization. Catriona is committed to making research relevant outside the academy and has used her research expertise to support grassroots groups and a range of stakeholder professionals such as social workers, nurses, commissioners and police officers. Catriona is working to develop future research that examines forms of direct and in-direct discrimination experienced by children, young people and adults who have lived experience of state care provision in the UK. Angela Wilcock is an academic tutor and lecturer in Criminology at the University of Sunderland. She is both an academic researcher and a professional with vast experience in front line service provision. She has a passion for work into the inequalities experienced by women and marginalised groups and her research interests include feminist research methodologies, violence against women, domestic violence, coercive and controlling behaviour, help-seeking, gender inequalities within the criminal justice system and offender management. She is also planning future research into women’s perceptions of domestic violence and the experiences of Thai women following migratory marriage. Her PhD thesis was entitled An Exploration of the Knowledge Women in Sunderland have of help-Seeking in Response to Domestic Violence. She has also worked with various initiatives including Rape Crisis Tyneside & Northumberland, children’s services, and the City of Sunderland Digital Inclusion project.
'This book is unique in being the first of its kind to use disruptive ambiguity to fuel critical thinking of the normative understandings of family and life trajectories. It achieves this by challenging the inertia of embedded cultures and policies which still frame reality for non-normative families – a triumph for the creation of an authentic discursive place for societal progress'. Professor Catherine Hayes, University of Sunderland, UK 'I would like to endorse this volume, which offers readers engagement with innovative work – both in terms of topic and/or methodology – in the field of family sociology. The book has an international appeal and both the editors and contributors are acknowledged experts in this field. The book aims to disrupt normative or expected accounts of family and the life course and – following the recent death of David HJ Morgan – it is encouraging to see that the volume intends to extend and rethink Morgan's work on family practices. I endorse and very much look forward to reading this publication'. Dr Stephen Hicks, University of Manchester, member of the Morgan Centre for Research into Everyday Lives 'An important and timely collection taking forward scholarship in the field of family sociology. This volume draws on a range of empirical research projects investigating many hitherto under-researched life stages and family formations – methodologically innovative and theoretically ambitious, it will be of interest to researchers as well as practitioners working beyond the academy'. Dr Charlotte Faircloth, Thomas Coram Research Unit, UCL Social Research Institute