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Drury, J. (2021, August 5th). The 2011 riots ten years on: Four myths and the realities. Left Foot Forward.
Drury, J. (2017, September). English riots 2011: New research shows why crowd behaviour isn't contagious. The Conversation.
Drury, J. (2016). Explaining involuntary influence: Beyond contagion. Urban Transformations, November.
Drury, J. (2019). If the police step up stop-and-search tactics, more trouble will follow. The Guardian, January.
Drury, J., Ball, R., Neville, F., Reicher, S., & Stott, C. (2019). Re-reading the 2011 English riots: ESRC ‘Beyond Contagion’ interim report. University of Sussex.
Drury, J., Stott, C., Ball, R., Neville, F., Reicher, S., & Choudhury, S. (2018, April). Understanding the spread of rioting across a city as control by the crowd. Urban Transformations.
Neville, F. G. (2016, August). Crowd emotions - passionate but not 'contagious'. Wakelet.
Neville, F. G. (2016, August). Recap of 2011 riots five years on. Wakelet.
Neville, F. (2018). Win or lose, watch a World Cup together can be a uniquely positive experience. ESRC Blog.
Radburn, M., & Stott, C. (2019, November 15th). The psychology of riots – and why it’s never just mindless violence. The Conversation.
Reicher, S. (2022, December 5th). China’s Covid policy didn’t have to end in riot and protest. This is why it did. The Guardian.
Reicher, S. (2021, August 6th). Why did it take years to appreciate the grievances that sparked the 2011 riots? The Guardian.
Reicher, S., Drury, J., & Stott, C. (2019, February 14th). London’s 2011 riots: report blames deprivation and poor policing – not mad, bad, dangerous people. The Conversation.
Stott, C. (2016, August). Five years after the English riots, we still don’t know why the violence spread. The Conversation.