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Annette Henry

Annette Henry

Project and Communications Officer

Biography

Annette joins King's from the School of Law at Queen Mary, London, where she has been working on the AHRC-funded Reproductive Borders and Bordering Reproduction (RBBR): Access to Care for Women from Ethnic Minority and Migrant Groups research project. King's is now leading the project in collaboration with Bristol University and the University of Sussex.

She has had a varied career history spanning TV production, working at ITV, BBC, Sky, Channel 4, and Channel 5. Followed by engaging community work in projects/communications/marketing within the secondary education sector, then working as a PR & Communications Consultant, working with UK and international charities and organisations. Her primary area of interest is social injustice and equality.

In her spare time, she co-founded a charity in Barbuda called The Be Foundation, and is Vice Chair and PRO of the Waltham Forest, Antigua & Barbuda and Dominica Twinning Association. And more recently, she has helped to set up a parent/carer group at her son's school called The Neurodiverse Collective.

Research

RBBR Hero Banner 1800x500
Reproductive Borders and Bordering Reproduction (RBBR): Access to Care for Women from Ethnic Minority and Migrant Groups

A pivotal research project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and led by QMUL in collaboration with Bristol University, Kings College London, and the University of Sussex, exploring the institutional and experiential barriers that ethnic minority and migrant women in England, UK, encounter when accessing maternal and reproductive healthcare.

Research

RBBR Hero Banner 1800x500
Reproductive Borders and Bordering Reproduction (RBBR): Access to Care for Women from Ethnic Minority and Migrant Groups

A pivotal research project, funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and led by QMUL in collaboration with Bristol University, Kings College London, and the University of Sussex, exploring the institutional and experiential barriers that ethnic minority and migrant women in England, UK, encounter when accessing maternal and reproductive healthcare.