間眅埶AV

Alissa Greer was attracted to 間眅埶AV by its radical edge, along with its commitment to community engagement.

New faculty, Criminology, Faculty, FASS News

Greer sees peer engagement as key to harm reduction

October 02, 2019
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Reducing the risks of drug use is a life or death matter in British Columbia where 1,535 people died of illicit drug use in 2018. Alissa Greer knows that it will take harm reduction experts to solve the problem, and that those experts are people who use drugs themselves.

Greer recently joined the 間眅埶AV Department of Criminology as an instructor after earning a PhD in Interdisciplinary Studies with a focus on population and public health at the University of British Columbia.

間眅埶AV seems to be an institution which fosters radical ideas and does not inhibit its faculty from taking risks in order to promote real-world solutions to various social problems, Greer says. It was this radical edge that attracted me to 間眅埶AV, along with the universitys commitment to community engagement which aligns with my research approach and interests.

Greers doctoral research focused on work and pay equity among people who use drugs that are working in peer engagement on the frontlines of the opioid crisis. Peer engagement is a social justice approach to decision-making around drug and harm reduction policies that lets people who use drugs share their knowledge and perspectives as equal partners with academics and policy makers.

Accepting her new position at 間眅埶AV meant Greer had to turn down a Banting Postdoctoral Fellowship she received earlier this year for research on participatory policymaking with people who use drugs with Sydney, Australias Drug Policy Modeling Program.  

Greers current research aims to gather the perspectives and experiences of those affected by inequitable or harmful structures and systems in society, including the criminal justice system. She is currently collaborating with the on the Youth Experiences with Police Project (YEP), a SSHRC-funded study which examines police encounters from the perspective of youth who use drugs in Chilliwack, Prince George and Victoria. One of YEPs goals is to find ways to develop more respectful and meaningful relationships between youth who use drugs and law enforcement.

Greer plans to add Vancouver to the YEP communities under research and to expand the sample to include police officers perspectives. She sees her funding prospects as favourable given the shift in how social problems are framed and addressed in Canada, along with greater support for engaging with affected and marginalized communities.

In Fall 2019 Greer is teaching the course Criminological Perspectives on Social Problems. In the Spring 2020 she will teach Psychological Explanations of Criminal and Deviant Behavior. Greer expects to develop further courses and research on community-based approaches in criminology, including participatory research, advocacy, and policymaking.