John Nagle
Source: https://pure.qub.ac.uk/en/persons/john-nagle/ Parent: https://www.qub.ac.uk/courses/undergraduate/anthropology-sociology-ba/
John Nagle
Professor
- Professor, School of Social Sciences, Education and Social Work
- The Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice
https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8836-9942
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EmailJohn.Nagle@qub.ac.uk
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Room 02.008 - Sociology and Social Work
United Kingdom
Accepting PhD Students
2005Research output 2005: 1Research output 2006: 1Research output 2008: 5Research output 2009: 7Research output 2010: 3Research output 2011: 2Research output 2012: 4Research output 2013: 5Research output 2014: 6Research output 2015: 5Research output 2016: 7Research output 2017: 3Research output 2018: 10Research output 2019: 7Research output 2020: 7Research output 2021: 8Research output 2022: 6Research output 2023: 6Research output 2024: 4Research output 2025: 5Research output 2026: 62026
Research activity per year
Personal profile
Research Focus
I am a Professor of Sociology, although my academic path began in Anthropology, where I completed my PhD at Queen’s University Belfast. Since then, my career has taken a somewhat interdisciplinary and international route, spanning research, teaching, and policy engagement across a range of institutions.
I have held posts at the Institute of Irish Studies at Queen’s, INCORE (the United Nations Research Centre for the Study of Conflict at Ulster University), the University of East London, and the University of Aberdeen, where I served as Reader in Sociology. Alongside these roles, I have held visiting positions as a Fellow at University College London, Visiting Professor in the UAE, and Research Fellow at the University of Exeter. These experiences have informed a research profile that is both comparative and cross‑disciplinary, with a strong interest in questions of identity, conflict, and social transformation.
Currently, I am a Fellow and advisory board member for SEPAD (Sectarianism, Proxies & De-sectarianisation) at Lancaster University’s Richardson Institute. At Queen’s University Belfast, I am also a Fellow of the Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice, and an Associate Fellow at the Institute of Irish Studies. I am also a research team member on Villanova University’s McNulty Institute for Women’s Leadership Idol Family Fellows project on Gender Inclusion in Post-Conflict Societies (2024–present).
For several years, I co‑edited the Irish Journal of Sociology, including its 30th anniversary issue, which featured contributions from President Michael D. Higgins. I also serve on the editorial boards of Nationalism and Ethnic Politics and Social Sciences.
My research has been presented in academic, public, and policy forums, including invited talks at the Foreign Policy Centre and the Middle East Institute in Washington, DC. I have published nine books and numerous journal articles, and my work has appeared in The Conversation, Slate, The Independent, and Times Higher Education. It has also been highlighted by Al Jazeera, Reuters, the Financial Times, The Chronicle of Higher Education, and the Belfast Telegraph. I have contributed expert commentary to BBC News, Sky News, BBC Scotland, and LBC.
I have served on review and advisory boards for the Irish Research Council and the Carnegie Trust, and my research has been supported by the Leverhulme Trust, the Arts & Humanities Research Council (AHRC), and the Scottish Funding Council.
Supervising PhD research is one of the most rewarding aspects of my work. I have had the privilege of working with doctoral students exploring topics such as masculinity in extractive industries, Indian migration and identity in Scotland, gender and policing in Northern Ireland and Bosnia and Herzegovina, and humanitarian practice in Nigeria. Collectively, these projects reflect my broader interest in how people experience and negotiate power, identity, and social change.
For recent discussions and public engagement, you can listen to this podcast which discussed my recent co-guest edited special issue of Ethnopolitics, titled Protesting Power-sharing: Contentious Politics in Divided Societies (co-edited with Simon Mabon)
Research Themes
Below are some of the core themes that inform my work — many of which overlap with the expert domains of John Nagle at Queen’s, enabling rich interdisciplinary dialogue:
- Divided and post‑conflict societies — how communities respond to legacy conflict, power‑sharing arrangements, and processes of de‑sectarianisation. (Nagle focuses on divided societies, power‑sharing and consociationalism.)
- Social movements and inclusion — particularly non‑sectarian movements (including LGBTQ, feminist, and class‑based groups) mobilising in deeply divided or transitional contexts. (Nagle’s current work engages with non‑sectarian activism in Lebanon and Northern Ireland.)
- Identity, memory and urban space — how identity is contested, remembered, and negotiated in urban settings shaped by conflict, sectarian legacy, and changing governance. (Nagle has studied memory‑work, right‑to‑the‑city protests in divided cities such as Beirut and Manama.)
- Power, marginality and mobility — exploring how power is exercised, resisted or transformed through migration, masculinities, humanitarian work, policing, and gender in various global contexts.
- Conflict, peace‑building and institutional change — a focus on how institutional arrangements (such as power‑sharing, transitional justice, de‑sectarianisation) interact with grassroots movements, social identity, and structural transformation. (Nagle’s concept of “zombie power‑sharing” builds on critique of weak or inert consociational systems.)
- Global comparative sociology — drawing on settings from Northern Ireland, the Middle East (Lebanon, Syria), Sub‑Saharan Africa (Nigeria), and beyond to understand how people experience, negotiate and shape change in diverse social, cultural and political environments.
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7 Similar Profiles
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LGBTQIA+ Social Sciences
- Social Systems Social Sciences
- Consociationalism Social Sciences
- Activism Social Sciences
- UK Social Sciences
- Lebanon Social Sciences
- Urban Areas Social Sciences
- Protest Social Sciences
Collaborations and top research areas from the last five years
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Research output
- 39 Article
- 8 Chapter (peer-reviewed)
- 4 Book
- 4 Other contribution
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10 More
- 2 Commissioned report
- 2 Edited book
- 2 Entry for encyclopedia/dictionary
- 2 Comment/debate
- 1 Conference contribution
- 1 Other chapter contribution
- 1 Book/Film/Article review
- 1 Editorial
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Contesting power-sharing: contentious politics in divided societies
Nagle, J. & Mabon, S., 23 Feb 2026, In: Ethnopolitics. 25, 2, p. 107-117 11 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access
File
- Democracy
- Tuition Fee
- Consociationalism
7 Downloads (Pure) - ### Contesting power-sharing? LGBTQ+ activism and the sexual citizenship of consociationalism
Murtagh, C. & Nagle, J., 23 Feb 2026, In: Ethnopolitics. 25, 2, p. 154-172 19 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access
File
- Consociationalism
- LGBTQIA+
- UK
- Tuition Fee
- Semi-Structured Interview
1 Citation (Scopus)
77 Downloads (Pure) - ### Dahiyeh: the Beirut suburb at the heart of an Israeli military doctrine
Nagle, J. & Aboultaif, E., 11 Mar 2026, The Conversation.
Research output: Contribution to specialist publication › Article
Open Access - ### Framing irredentism: ancient statehood, sacred lands and causes and the national family
Nagle, J., Jan 2026, In: Nations and Nationalism. 32, 1, p. 103-113 11 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access
File
- Narrative
- Sacred Land
- Case Study
- Convertibility
1 Citation (Scopus)
74 Downloads (Pure) - ### Space, security and sovereign power: the case of Bahrain
Mabon, S. & Nagle, J., 2026, In: International Spectator. 61, 1, p. 141-158 19 p.
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Open Access
File
- Bahrain
- Securitization
- Tuition Fee
- Social Space
- Diaspora
1 Citation (Scopus)
56 Downloads (Pure)
Prizes
Nagle, J. (Recipient), 01 Jan 2012
Prize: Fellowship awarded competitively - ### Leverhulme Research Fellowship
Nagle, J. (Recipient), 01 Sept 2017
Prize: Fellowship awarded competitively
- UK
- Conflict
- Social Movement
- Gender Equality
- Consociationalism
Activities
- 25 Invited talk
- 5 Participation in workshop, seminar, course
- 5 Oral presentation
- 4 Editorial activity
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16 More
- 4 PhD external examination
- 3 Participation in conference
- 3 Membership of peer review panel or committee
- 3 Research and Teaching at External Organisation
- 2 Participation in Festival/Exhibition
- 2 Membership of board
- 1 PGT external examination
- 1 UG external examination
- 1 Membership of network
- 1 Other
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1 Invited or keynote talk at national or international conference
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External examination of PhD at the University of Exeter
Nagle, J. (Examiner)
18 Feb 2026
Activity: Examination types › PhD external examination - ### Queer Activism
Nagle, J. (Invited speaker)
12 Feb 2026
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk - ### Access Student Subject Taster Event (Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology)
Nagle, J. (Organiser)
04 Nov 2025
Activity: Participating in or organising an event types › Participation in workshop, seminar, course - ### Reproducing or contesting hypermasculinity? LGBTQ activism in postwar Lebanon
Nagle, J. (Invited speaker)
03 Jun 2025
Activity: Talk or presentation types › Invited talk - ### Social Sciences (Journal)
Nagle, J. (Editorial board member)
31 May 2025 → 05 May 2028
Activity: Publication peer-review and editorial work types › Editorial activity
Press/Media
23/03/2026
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Research - ### Belfast rap group Kneecap defiant ahead of UK terrorism hearing (Financial Times)
18/06/2025
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Expert Comment - ### Why have anti-immigration riots broken out in Northern Ireland? (Aljazeera)
11/06/2025
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Expert Comment - ### Interviewed on BBC Sunday Sequence on Lebanon
21/01/2024
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Expert Comment - ### 'Violences à Beyrouth: La tension reste vive en plein jour de deuil'
16/10/2021
1 Media contribution
Press/Media: Expert Comment