Professor Sundari Anitha (she/her)

School of Sociological Studies, Politics and International Relations

Chair in Sociological Studies

REF UoA 21 lead

Sundari Anitha
Profile picture of Sundari Anitha
S.Anitha@sheffield.ac.uk

Full contact details

Professor Sundari Anitha
School of Sociological Studies, Politics and International Relations
The Wave
2 Whitham Road
Sheffield
S10 2AH
Profile

Anitha joined the university in 2024, having previously worked at the University of Lincoln, the University of Leeds and the University of Central Lancashire.


Anitha’s research focuses on two areas across the disciplines of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology: (i)  the problem of violence against women and girls (VAWG) at the intersection of gender, race, border and migration in diverse contexts including the UK, US and India; domestic violence and abuse, including particular manifestations such as dowry-related abuse, forced marriage, transnational forms of violence such as abandonment of wives and domestic servitude; sexual violence including everyday forms of sexual harassment in online and offline spaces; gender-based violence in university communities; and (ii) the intersection of gender, race and ethnicity in employment relations; agency, solidarity and industrial action by migrant workers;  and trade union representation of migrant workers.   Anitha’s research draws upon qualitative research methods, including life history methods.


Anitha has been the Principal Investigator and Co-Investigator on a range of research projects and received funding from the The Leverhulme Trust, the Economic and Social Research Council, the Arts and Humanities Research Council, the Nuffield Foundation and the British Academy. 


Anitha is co-editor of Families, Relationships and Society, and is on the editorial board of Women’s Studies International Forum  and on the  International Editorial Advisory Board of Bristol University Press’ book series on Gender and Crime in a Globalised World. She previously served as Associate Editor of Women’s Studies International Forum (2022-23) and on the Editorial Board of British Journal of Criminology, Violence Against Women, and Social Policy and Society.


She is a member of the ESRC Assessor Panel and ESRC peer review college and was a member of the REF2021 Sociology sub-panel.

Qualifications

Fellow of Higher Education Academy


PhD in Politics, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 2003
 

MA in Political Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi 1996 
 

BA (Honours) in Political Science Lady Shri Ram College, Delhi University, 1994 

Research interests

My research interests lie in two areas across the disciplines of Sociology, Social Policy and Criminology: (i) the problem of violence against women and girls (VAWG) in diverse contexts including the UK, US and India; prevention, protection and criminal justice responses to this problem; domestic violence and abuse, including particular manifestations such as dowry-related abuse, forced marriage, transnational forms of violence such as abandonment of wives and domestic servitude; sexual violence including everyday forms of sexual harassment in online and offline spaces; and gender-based violence in university communities; and (ii) Intersection of gender, race and ethnicity in employment relations; labour exploitation and resistance; agency, solidarity and industrial militancy by migrant workers;  and trade unions’ representation of migrant workers.

Postgraduate Supervision

Anitha has previously supervised/ is currently supervising PhD students in the following areas: violence against women and girls including domestic abuse and sexual violence, and industrial action. Anitha welcomes enquiries and applications to study for research degrees in her areas of research interest.

Publications

Books

  • Anitha S & Pearson R (2018) Striking Women: Struggles and Strategies of South Asian Women Workers from Grunwick to Gate Gourmet. Lawrence & Wishart Ltd. View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download

Edited books

Journal articles

Book chapters

Reports

  • Jordan A, Anitha S & Chanamuto N (2023) Policies on gender-based violence in UK universities: Understanding current practice, mapping future directions: Dos/Don’ts Checklist for Gender-based Violence Policy makers and Practitioners View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Jordan A, Anitha S & Chanamuto N (2023) Policies on gender-based violence in UK universities: Understanding current practice, mapping future directions View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Anitha S, Gill A & Noack-Lundberg K (2023) Understanding protection and prevention responses to forced marriage in England and Wales View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Zielinska I, Anitha S, Rasell M & Kane R (2022) Polish women’s experiences of domestic violence and abuse in the United Kingdom View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Addington C, Anitha S, Baars V, Day K, Domoney-Lyttle Z, Downes J, Gillies J, Mabrouk M, Marlow E, McGookin N , McMillan L et al (2021) Eradicating sexual violence in tertiary education: A report from UCU’s sexual violence task group View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Anitha S & Gill A (2021) Domestic violence during the lockdown: the needs of Black and minoritised communities during the pandemic View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Anitha S, Roy A & Yalamarty H (2016) Disposable women: Abuse, violence and abandonment in transnational marriages: Issues for policy and practice in the UK and India View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Anitha S, Chopra P, Farouk W, Haq Q & Khan S (2008) Forgotten women: Domestic violence, poverty and South Asian women with no recourse to public funds View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
  • Anitha S, Chopra P, Farouk W, Haq Q, Khan S, Mahmood A & Mansoor A (2007) Domestic violence and mental health: experiences of South Asian women in Manchester View this article in WRRO RIS download Bibtex download
Research group

Sheffield Interpersonal Violence and Abuse Research Network; 


Migration Research Group; 
 

Centre for Criminological Research; 
 

Centre for International Research on Care, Labour and Inequalities;
 

Gender Research Network

Grants

Violence and Abuse in Romantic Relationships: Understanding the Experiences of Women and Girls in India (August 2023-July 2025), Principal Investigator; Funder: British Academy

Violence and Abuse in Romantic Relationships: Understanding the Experiences of Women and Girls in India (Jan 2024-December 2024), Principal Investigator; Funder: British Academy/The Leverhulme Trust

Tackling violence against racially minoritised women and girls (January 2023-June 2024), Co-Investigator with Prof Aisha Gill (PI), University of Bristol; Funder: Economic and Social Research Council

Forced Marriage: Enhancing protection and prevention responses (April 2020-May 2023), Principal Investigator with Prof Aisha Gill (Co-I), University of Roehampton; Funder: Nuffield Foundation

Transnational abandonment of South Asian women: a new form of violence against women (January 2013-March 2016), Principal Investigator with Prof. Anupama Roy (Co-I), Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Funder: British Academy

Striking Women: South Asian workers’ struggles in the UK labour market: From Grunwick to Gate Gourmet (June 2012-December 2013), Principal Investigator, with Prof Ruth Pearson (Co-I), University of Leeds; Funder: AHRC 
 

Teaching activities

I convene the second year module, ‘Men, Feminism and Gender Relations’ and deliver guest lectures on domestic violence, intersectionality, labour exploitation and resistance, and life history methods. My approach to teaching combines the academic, the personal and political -  my teaching enables me to draw upon my research interests and my practice experience.

Partnerships, engagement and impact

Anitha previously managed a Women’s Aid refuge and worked as a Case Worker for Asha Projects, a ‘by and for’ refuge for victim-survivors of domestic abuse. She is a trustee of three leading UK charities - Southall Black Sisters, ATLEU (Anti-trafficking and Labour Exploitation Unit) and National Centre for Social Research. She served as an expert advisor on labour disputes for the 2025 exhibition ‘Resistance’ curated by Steve McQueen, at Turner Contemporary, Margate. She has been active in advocacy and policy-making on violence against women, including forced marriage, for over 25 years.

Anitha’s research has also led to policy impact. Transnational marriage abandonment (TMA) occurs when abusive husbands residing in the West strand their marriage migrant wives in their home countries, depriving them of their residential and financial rights and preventing them from accessing domestic abuse services in the UK. Anitha’s research documented (and named) the problem of TMA for the first time in 2016, following which she worked with Southall Black Sisters to persuade the family justice system in England & Wales to recognise such abandonment as a form of domestic abuse in 2017. However, victims who were stranded abroad found that immigration officers were unwilling to act on this change and routinely prevented their re-entry to the UK. In a landmark ruling on 14 October 2022, Justice Lieven held that victims of TMA are unlawfully discriminated against as they are not allowed to avail reliefs available to victims who are in the UK on a spouse visa. Following this ruling, Anitha was part of a working group on TMA that advised civil servants on the policy change. Hundreds of victims of domestic abuse who have been stranded abroad by their British husbands will finally get justice through a new out of country settlement route into the UK which comes into force on 31 January 2024.

Following Anitha’s research on South Asian women’s participation in the Grunwick and Gate Gourmet industrial disputes in the UK, she worked with Prof Ruth Pearson to produce a variety of resources to convey the research findings to non-academic audiences. These include a website for schools (key stages 3, 4 and 5) and community organisations about migrant workers in the UK and the world which have received over 3.5 million visits since January 2014:  Striking Women | ; and a two-part downloadable comic ‘Striking Lives’, depicting the life stories of two south Asian women workers in the UK: https://www.striking-women.org/sites/default/files/striking_women_for_download_opt.pdf .