Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity, and social relations in two English prisons, the authors reflect on Stuart Hall’s formulation of a new ethni-cities paradigm. Using a vignette case study and the comments of a range of prisoners, they consider how persistent patterns of racism are reproduced and challenged in the prison and beyond. British and penal historical and cultural contexts are provided to facilitate an empirically informed discussion of plural and evolving racisms, new eth-nicities, and Islamophobia. An argument is presented that suggests a thinly theorized understanding of ethnicity is assuming the status of a falsely benign orthodoxy, one that shrouds the familiar and painful injuries of racism
This article explores how the 2013 Woolwich murder in the streets of London and the conflict in Syri...
The disproportionate criminalisation and incarceration of particular minority ethnic groups has long...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity, and social relations in two English ...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity and social relations in two English p...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity, and social relations in two English ...
This article explores the situated nature of male prisoner identities in the late modern British con...
This article explores recent concerns about the emergence of gangs in prisons in England and Wales. ...
The idea of ‘race relations in prison' brings together potent symbols of troubled times. The numbers...
This chapter considers the racialised dynamics of ethnographic research in two men's prisons in Sout...
This Article explores the nexus of two stories central to contemporary American jurisprudence and--f...
In seeking to provide a custodial therapeutic environment able to meet the diverse needsof every pri...
Using personal experience and research in English men’s prisons this chapter explores the ways in wh...
This paper explores the paradox that whilst the quantitative measures of prison performance in relat...
Using extended edited extracts from two interviews with men in prison this chapter explores the pers...
This article explores how the 2013 Woolwich murder in the streets of London and the conflict in Syri...
The disproportionate criminalisation and incarceration of particular minority ethnic groups has long...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity, and social relations in two English ...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity and social relations in two English p...
Drawing from a recent qualitative study of identity, ethnicity, and social relations in two English ...
This article explores the situated nature of male prisoner identities in the late modern British con...
This article explores recent concerns about the emergence of gangs in prisons in England and Wales. ...
The idea of ‘race relations in prison' brings together potent symbols of troubled times. The numbers...
This chapter considers the racialised dynamics of ethnographic research in two men's prisons in Sout...
This Article explores the nexus of two stories central to contemporary American jurisprudence and--f...
In seeking to provide a custodial therapeutic environment able to meet the diverse needsof every pri...
Using personal experience and research in English men’s prisons this chapter explores the ways in wh...
This paper explores the paradox that whilst the quantitative measures of prison performance in relat...
Using extended edited extracts from two interviews with men in prison this chapter explores the pers...
This article explores how the 2013 Woolwich murder in the streets of London and the conflict in Syri...
The disproportionate criminalisation and incarceration of particular minority ethnic groups has long...
This thesis examines the treatment and experiences of foreign national prisoners in England and Wale...