Dr Allison Holmes

Dr Allison Holmes

Birmingham Law School
Assistant Professor

Contact details

Address
Birmingham Law School
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT
UK

Allison is an assistant professor in law at Birmingham Law School. Her research sits at the intersection of law, technology, and criminal justice. Her work focuses on the incorporation of technologies into the investigative and trial processes, exploring the legal, social, and ethical challenges this presents.

Qualifications

  • PGCHE, University of Kent, 2021
  • PhD, University of Kent, 2019
  • LLM in Human Rights and Criminal Justice, University of Limerick, 2013
  • LLB (Hons), University of Limerick, 2011
  • BA International Affairs and Economics, George Washington University, 2009

Biography

Allison joined Birmingham Law School as an Assistant Professor in 2025 from the University of Kent where she worked as a lecturer from 2019 following the completion of her PhD. Allison is a Fellow of the Higher Education Academy. She holds an LLM in Human Rights and Criminal Justice and an LLB (hons) from the University of Limerick, as well as a BA in International Affairs and Economics from George Washington University. She has held visiting fellowships at Dublin City University and the University of Melbourne.

Teaching

  • Law, Justice, and Ethics
  • Criminal Law
  • Cyberlaw

Postgraduate supervision

Allison would be happy to hear from prospective PhD candidates with an interest in any of the following areas:
Data protection and privacy law
Artificial Intelligence
Online safety and online harms
Criminal justice
Technologically facilitated gender-based offences


Find out more - our PhD Law  page has information about doctoral research at the University of Birmingham.

Research

Allison’s research sits at the intersection of law, technology, and criminal justice, focusing in particular on the way that technologies are leveraged both to investigate and to commit criminal offences. Her work takes a socio-legal approach, considering the legal, ethical, and social implications of the development and adoption of novel technologies, including those relating to algorithmic prediction and artificial intelligence. In investigating these areas, Allison draws on insights from a range of disciplinary fields including computer science, digital forensics, criminology, sociology, and psychology.

Her forthcoming book, Policing Communications Data: Privacy, Surveillance, and Policy (Routledge) considers how the digitalisation of policing and the increasing datafication of individuals is in conflict with existing legal mechanisms for privacy and data protection. 

Publications

Recent publications

Article

White, PM, Fuller, N, Holmes, AM & Franqueira, V 2025, 'Experiential Case Study Audit of Three Popular Period Trackers Using General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) and Intimate Privacy Assessment Criteria', Contraception. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2025.111235

Holmes, A 2022, 'Citizen Led Policing in the Digital Realm: Paedophile Hunters and Article 8 in the case of Sutherland v Her Majesty’s Advocate', Modern Law Review, vol. 85, no. 1, pp. 219-231. https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2230.12653

Holmes, A 2017, 'Automated Investigations: The Role of the Request Filter in Communications Data Analysis', Information Rights, Policy & Practice, vol. 2, no. 2. https://doi.org/10.21039/irpandp.v2i2.44

Holmes, A 2017, 'Private actor or public authority? How the status of communications service providers affects human rights', Communications Law, vol. 22, no. 1, pp. 21-28. <https://plus-lexis-com.bham-ezproxy.idm.oclc.org/uk/analytical-materials-uk/private-actor-or-public-authority-how-the-sta/?crid=ba3884c7-d433-40f4-83f9-2bd519aacfa2&config=&pdtocfullpath=/shared/document/analytical-materials-uk/urn:contentItem:5N1W-2391-DXSY-Y0YH-00000-00&pdcomponentid=dg4k&pdtocnodeidentifier=>

Chapter (peer-reviewed)

Holmes, AM 2023, Serious and Systemic? Live Facial Recognition Technology in the UK and its Impact on Adequacy. in E Celeste, R A Costello, E Harbinja & N Xanthoulis (eds), Data Protection and Digital Sovereignty Post-Brexit. 1 edn, Bloomsbury Publishing, pp. 105-122. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781509966516.ch-006

View all publications in research portal

Expertise

Digital technologies in criminal justice - AI, data protection, privacy, online safety, technologically facilitated offending.

Expertise

Digital technologies in criminal justice - AI, data protection, privacy, online safety, technologically facilitated offending.