Roseneil's research spans sociology, gender studies, psychosocial studies and group analysis, and has focused on social movements, citizenship and gender politics, and on intimacy, sexuality and personal life. Her Ph.D. thesis studied the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp and how women can act collectively for social change, and against male domination and female subordination. The Greenham Common Peace Camp was an example of a non-violent feminist protest, started by Welsh anti-nuclear feminist group Women for Life on Earth, and mobilising hundreds of thousands of women over more than a decade. In 2016, at an event Bringing Greenham Home, which featured a weekend of Greenham-related films, Roseneil spoke about her personal ties to Greenham Common and her perception of the peace camps as "queer, intersectional spaces, where both gender diversity and indigenous land rights were part of the discussion". Roseneil has studied transformation in subjectivity, gender, sexuality, and personal life over time, focusing both on individual experience and the role of social movements and collective action in producing social change. Drawing on psychoanalysis, Roseneil is particularly interested in why there is individual or collective resistance, including unconscious resistance, to change. Among Roseneil's studies are explorations into the experiences of people in non-conventional couples and families, including people who are in relationships in which they live apart from their partners, people in lesbian and gay relationships, those in shared accommodation, and single people. A common thread is an interest in friendship and how support and care can be provided through non-familial networks. Her research also encompasses members of marginalised and racialised groups, first/second generation migrants and exiled communities. Roseneil uses a combination of biographical narrative, psychoanalytically informed methods, results from surveys and comparative national studies to gather single-person case studies alongside macro-level analysis. She has focused her research on people living in the United Kingdom and Bulgaria, Norway and Portugal. One example of her work, in a study called Living Apart , relates to couples who choose to live separately. This report suggested that the number of couples who live apart in the United Kingdom may be higher than the 6% found in the 2011 Census, a number that Roseneil claims is closer to 10% of the population. Nearly half are aged between 16 and 44. Reasons include the difficulty of finding jobs in the same location as more women now work, and women wanting respite from domestic chores traditionally expected in cohabiting. In earlier research on unconventional intimacies, Roseneil found that people were "enmeshed in complex networks of intimacy and care, and had strong commitments and connections to others" to whom they were not biologically or legally related.
Books
Roseneil has published the following books:
2015: Reproducing Citizens: family, state and civil society,
2013: Beyond Citizenship? Feminism and the Transformation of Belonging,
2012: Remaking Citizenship in Multicultural Europe: women’s movements, gender and diversity,.
2011: Social Research after the Cultural Turn, Basingstoke,.
2001: Globalisation and Social Movements, Basingstoke, .
2000: Common Women, Uncommon Practices: the queer feminisms of Greenham,
1999: Consuming Cultures: power and resistance,
1999: Practising Identities: power and resistance, .
1995: Disarming Patriarchy: feminism and political action at Greenham,
1994: Stirring It: challenges for feminism'',.
Career
From 1991-2007 Roseneil was lecturer of Sociology, then University Research Fellow and from 2000, Professor of Sociology & Gender Studies at the University of Leeds. She was the founding Director of the Centre for Interdisciplinary Gender Studies. From 2005 to 2015 Roseneil was visiting Professor II in Sociology at the Centre for Gender Research at the University of Oslo. In 2007 yo 2015 she was Professor of Sociology and Social Theory in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck University, and Director of the BirkbeckInstitute for Social Research. Amongst her duties she served as Assistant Dean for the School of Social Science, History and Philosophy, and Head of the Department of Psychosocial Studies. In 2014 she held a position at the Institute of Advanced Studies, University of Western Australia as Professor-at-Large. Roseneil held the position of Executive Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences and Professor of Sociology at the University of Essex from 2016-2018. During this period, more than 60 new academics were appointed whilst establishing a new Department of Psychosocial and Psychoanalytic Studies. Roseneil was appointed as Dean of University College London Social & Historical Sciences in March 2018. Roseneil is based in the UCL Institute of Advanced Studies.
Media appearances
Roseneil has appeared on numerous BBC affiliated broadcasts such as BBC Radio 4's Woman's Hour on episodes The Company of Women, Do Lesbians Really Want to Marry?, Peace Campaigners, and Part-time relationships. Roseneil has also guest starred in the BBC Radio 4 series Thinking Allowed in a broadcast titled Living Apart Relationships and a BBC World Service broadcast titled Family Life. In 2010 Roseneil appeared on the BBC 4 TV seriesTimeshift, in an episode titled Greenham Common Changed My Life In 2015 Roseneil was involved and interviewed in a film, The PhD Survival Video: PhDs, Stress and Mental Health which was launched at the Birkbeck Institute for Social Research. In an interview with Times Higher Education, Roseneil comments that problems are inherent in doing a PhD and can cause real stress:
“We talk about problems of isolation, competitiveness, the challenges to self-confidence that a PhD necessarily involves, and how, if you have particular vulnerabilities at the start, these can be accentuated during the PhD”