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Zahra Zsuzsanna Stardust

Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Centre of Excellence in Automated Decision-Making and Society, Queensland University of Technology

Dr Zahra Stardust is a socio-legal researcher whose work is concerned with intersections between criminal law, sexuality, labour and justice. Her doctoral research Alternative Pornographies, Regulatory Fantasies, Resistance Politics examined the relationships between social movements and law reform. She has published book chapters in New Feminist Literary Studies (Cambridge University Press, 2019), Orienting Feminisms (Palgrave, 2018) and Queer Sex Work (Routledge, 2015), and articles in Current Issues in Criminal Justice, the Journal of Sexual Health and the World Journal of AIDS. She is on the Editorial Board of the academic journal Porn Studies.

Zahra has fifteen years’ experience working on diverse social justice and human rights issues with community organisations, NGOs and UN bodies. She has worked as the Manager of Policy, Strategy and Research at the ACON (AIDS council of NSW) on HIV treatment & prevention, as the International Spokesperson and Policy Advisor for Scarlet Alliance (Australian Sex Workers Association) on sex worker rights, and as a Board Member for the NSW Gay and Lesbian Rights Lobby advocating for the removal of homosexual advance defence, the expungement of historical convictions and the strengthening of anti-discrimination protections. She is a volunteer with the Fair Play initiative at the Inner City Legal Centre, monitoring police in their drug detection operations at Mardi Gras, and a member of the Australian Lawyers for Human Rights LGBTI Sub-Committee.

Prior to this, Zahra worked at Allens Arthur Robinson, where she did pro bono work with the Homeless Persons Legal Service and PIAC’s Indigenous Justice Project Returning Stolen Wages and was seconded to the Kimberley Land Council for the Aurora Native Title Internship Program. She was a casework assistant at Wirringa Baiya Aboriginal Women’s Legal Centre working on cases of discrimination, family violence and sexual assault, a Country Office Intern with the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA) in Eritrea contributing to adolescent sexual and reproductive health programs, and an intern with UN Women Australia contributing to Australia’s human rights reporting processes.

Over the last 10 years Zahra has taught Criminology, Gender and Cultural Studies, Social Research and Policy, Politics and International Relations and Criminal Law and Procedure at both UNSW and the University of Sydney. She has studied as part of the Summer Institute on Sexuality, Culture and Society at the University of Amsterdam and the Summer Doctoral Program at the University of Oxford Internet Institute. She has presented her research at conferences in the United States, United Kingdom, Scotland, Canada, Singapore and Japan, including as an invited speaker on Sex and the State at the International Bar Association Conference in Tokyo.

Zahra is currently working on a Stigma Indicators Monitoring Project with Scarlet Alliance and the UNSW Centre for Social Research in Health, collecting qualitative data on sex work stigma around Australia. She currently volunteers as a Mentor for the Women’s Justice Network, supporting women recently released from prison with social reintegration. She hosts a podcast called Thinking Justice in which she interviews academics, activists and critical thinkers about the past, the future and the limits of the law.

Experience

  • 2020–present
    Fellow, Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society, Harvard University
  • 2017–2020
    Researcher, UNSW Centre for Social Research in Health
  • 2019–2020
    Teaching Fellow and Research Officer, UNSW Law Faculty
  • 2014–2020
    Associate Lecturer, UNSW School of Social Sciences
  • 2013–2019
    PhD Candidate, UNSW School of Arts and Media

Education

  • 2020 
    College of Law, Graduate Diploma of Legal Practice
  • 2019 
    University of New South Wales, PhD (Arts & Media)
  • 2017 
    University of Oxford, Summer Doctoral Program
  • 2014 
    University of Amsterdam, Summer Institute on Sexuality, Culture & Society
  • 2011 
    University of Sydney, Master of Arts (Research) (Gender and Cultural Studies)
  • 2008 
    University of Sydney, Bachelor of Laws (Honors)
  • 2004 
    University of Sydney, Bachelor of Arts (Modern History)

Publications

  • 2016
    Pornography as Protest: DIY Porn and Direct Action, Madison Young (ed), The DIY Porn Handbook: Documenting and Our Sexual Revolutions, Greenery Press: San Francisco (forthcoming).
  • 2016
    Performer-Centred Pornography as Sex Worker Rights: Developing Labour Standards in a Criminal Context, Research for Sex Work, Issue 15: Resistance and Resilience, Global Network of Sex Work Projects.
  • 2015
    Critical Femininities, Fluid Sexualities and Queer Temporalities: Erotic performers on Objectification, Femmephobia and Oppression, Mary Laing, Katy Pilcher and Nicola Smith (eds), Queer Sex Work, Routledge Studies in Crime and Society: United Kingdom, 67-78.
  • 2015
    Coming Out, Coming Hard: Privacy, Exhibitionism and Running for Parliament, Jiz Lee (ed), How to Come Out like a Porn Star: Essays on Pornography, Protection and Privacy, Three L Media: San Francisco.
  • 2014
    Fisting is Not Permitted: Criminal Intimacies, Queer Sexualities and Feminist Porn in the Australian Legal Context, Feona Attwood and Clarissa Smith (eds), Porn Studies, Volume 1, Issue 3, 258-275, United Kingdom: Routledge.
  • 2014
    Sex Work is Work: Sex Worker Human Rights in Australia, International Bar Association: Human Rights Law Working Group News, Volume 1, Issue 2, 30-34.
  • 2012
    Mandatory Testing for HIV and Sexually Transmissible Infections among Sex Workers in Australia: A Barrier to HIV and STI Prevention (with Janelle Fawkes and Elena Jeffreys), World Journal of AIDS, Volume 2, No 3, 203-211.
  • 2010
    Subversion, Activism and Gender Play: The Underground Feminism of Erotic Performance, Laura Finley and Emily Reynolds Stringer (eds), Beyond Burning Bras: Feminist Activism for Everyone, Praeger: California and Oxford, 70-73.

Professional Memberships

  • World Association for Sexual Health
  • International Association for the Study of Sexuality, Culture & Society (Associate Member)
  • Cultural Studies Association of Australasia
  • Australian Lawyers for Human Rights
  • Australian Women’s & Gender Studies Association