Turner, Denise and Price, Marie (2020) ‘Resilient when it comes to death’: exploring the significance of bereavement for the well - being of social work students. Qualitative Social Work, 20 (5). pp. 1339-1355. ISSN 1473-3250
Turner, Denise (2020) Book review : Personal relationships and intimacy in the age of social media. Journal of Technology in Human Services, 38 (4). pp. 410-411. ISSN 1522-8991
Turner, Denise (2020) Mutual ‘App’reciation: co-production as a model for delivering digital capability within social work education. Social work education, 40 (7). pp. 942-956. ISSN 0261-5479
Turner, Denise and Price, Marie (2020) How social workers can support people facing inconceivable grief in the pandemic. Community Care.
Turner, Denise, Landmann, Mick and Kirkland, Diane (2020) Making ideas “app”-en: the creation and evolution of a digital mobile resource to teach social work interviewing skills. Social work education, 39 (2). pp. 188-199. ISSN 0261-5479
Turner, Denise (2017) Perspectives on the experience of sudden, unexpected child death: the very worst thing? Palgrave MacMillan, London. ISBN 9783319660165
Turner, Denise (2016) Only Connect: unifying the social in social work and social media. Journal of social work practice, 30 (3). pp. 313-327. ISSN 0265-0533
Turner, Denise (2016) 'Not behaving as a grieving mother should'. In: Qualitative ethics in practice. Left Coast Press, Abingdon. ISBN 9781629581675
Turner, Denise (2015) 'Research you cannot talk about': a personal account of researching sudden, unexpected child death. Illness, crisis and loss, 24 (2). pp. 73-87. ISSN 1054-1373
Turner, Denise (2014) 'Memories are made of this': personal reflections on the creation and maintenance of memorials and mementoes. Bereavement care, 33 (3). pp. 92-96. ISSN 0268-2621
Turner, Denise (2014) Creating #teamturner: an autoethnography of connection within social work education. In: Social media in social work education. Critical Publishng. ISBN 9781909682573
Turner, Denise (2013) Telling the story: what can be learned from parents' experience of the professional response following the sudden, unexpected death of a child? Doctoral thesis, University of Sussex.