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Dr Sanja Milivojevic is a Research Fellow in Criminology at La Trobe University, Melbourne, and Associate Director of Border Criminologies at Oxford University. Sanja holds LL.B. and LL.M. from Belgrade University’s Law School, Serbia, and a PhD from Monash University, Australia. Her research interests are borders, mobility, human trafficking, modern slavery, security technologies, surveillance, gender and victimisation, and international criminal justice and human rights. Sanja is a recipient of Australian and international research grants and was NSW representative at the Australian and New Zealand Society of Criminology’s Committee of Management. She was a visiting scholar at Oxford University, University of Oslo, University of Belgrade and the University of Zagreb, as well as a Public Interest Law Fellow at Columbia University’s Law School in New York. Sanja has published five books and over 60 publications in English and Serbian. 

Recent publications

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  • Milivojevic S and Radulski E (2020) The “future Internet” and crime: Towards a criminology of the Internet of Things (updated reprint for the Belgrade Law School Journal), Crimen, vol. XI, no. 3, pp. 255-271. 

  • Milivojevic S, Moore H, and Segrave M (2020) Freeing the modern slaves, one click at a time: Theorising human trafficking, modern slavery, and technology, Anti-Trafficking Review, no. 14, pp. 16-32.

  • Milivojevic S (2020) Driving the social change from below: Exploring the role of counter-security technologies in constructing mobile noncitizens, Citizenship Studies, vol. 14, no. 4, published online 18 June.

  • Milivojevic S and Radulski E (2020) The “future Internet” and crime: Towards a criminology of the Internet of Things, Current Issues in Criminal Justice, vol. 32, no. 2, pp. 193-207. 

  • Milivojevic S, Hedwards B, and Segrave M (2020) Examining the promise and delivery of sustainable development goals in addressing human trafficking and modern slavery, in Blaustein J, Fitz-Gibbon K, Pino N and White R (Eds) Emerald Handbook of Crime, Justice and Sustainable Development, Emerald Publishing. (English)

  • Aliverti A, Milivojevic S, and Weber L (2019) Tracing imprints of the border in the territorial, justice and welfare domains: a multi-site ethnography, The Howard Journal of Crime and Justice (H index 11, IF 0.149), vol. 58, no. 2, pp. 240-259. (English)

  • Milivojevic S (2019) ‘Stealing the fire’, 2.0 style? Technology, the pursuit of mobility, social memory and de-securitization of migration, Theoretical Criminology (H Index 63, IF 2.667), vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 211-227. (English)

  • Moore H, Segrave M, Hedwards B, and Milivojevic S (2019) Australia’s response to human trafficking nationally and regionally: the question of impact, in Bryson-Clark J and Poucki S (eds) The Sage Handbook of Human Trafficking and Modern Slavery, Sage, pp. 434-452. (English)

  • Segrave M and Milivojevic S (2019) Using in-depth interviewing and documentary analysis in criminological research, in Davies P and Francis P (eds) Doing Criminological Research, third edition, Sage, pp. 341-362. (English)

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