Dr David Khabaz

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Lecturer in Sociology

Social Sciences

(United Kingdom) +44 20 7911 5000 ext 69275
32/38 Wells Street
London
GB
W1T 3UW
Thursdays 14.30-16.00
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About me

I joined University of Westminster’s Sociology team in 2008 where my specialist teaching is in media, globalisation and research methods.

My PhD research, which I completed in 2000 at the London School of Economics, examined the development of British media as an institution of ‘culture industry’ and an integral component of global economy. My first book, published in 2006, is closely, but not entirely, related to my doctoral research and is entitled: ‘Manufactured Schema: Thatcher, the Miners and the Culture Industry’.

I am a qualified higher education teacher. I received my first teaching qualification (PGCE-FE) in 1997.In 2016, I gained, with distinction, a Professional Recognition and Enhancement Scheme for Teaching (PRESTige) and received Fellowship of UK’s Higher Education Academy.

In terms of impact, I have external association with the University of St Thomas in Minnesota, USA. I teach one of their main courses in ‘Inter-Cultural Communication’ in London. I also co-supervise Masters’ thesis at the University of Hamburg in Germany. 

Professional membership:

Authors' Licensing and Collecting Society 

British Sociological Association

Teaching

3CRIM001- Crime and Society

4CRIM002- Justice and Human Rights

4CRIM005- Crime and the London Underworld

5CRIM008W- Research Methods in Sociology and Criminology

4CRIM006W.1- Researching Crime and Justice

5SOCL009W- Globalisation and the Media 

6SOCL009W.2- Making the News 

6CRIM002W.Y- Dissertation in Sociology and Criminology

Research

Research interests

My main research expertise is in ‘social relevance’ of media and, in particular, the impact of social media on the cultural, political and economic relations of the world. Currently, I am developing a research portfolio on the impact of social media on global interest in 'democratic rights and political activism' and have published two articles in this field: The Revolt and the Role of the Politicized Youth in the Middle East, (Journal of South Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Vol. XXXVI, No.1, Fall 2012) and ‘Framing Brexit: the role, and the impact, of the national newspapers on the EU Referendum’, Sage Journal of Newspaper Research, Volume 39 Issue 3, November 2018)

Publications

For details of all my research outputs, visit my WestminsterResearch profile.