Ash’s article, ‘The untruthful source: Prisoner’s writings, official and reform documentation, 1900–1930’, published following her 2009 book on prison dress, questions how myths arose about the history of prisoners’ clothing in Britain in the first half of the 20th century. Ash shows that, although there was little critical writing about prisoners’ clothing in this period, the inmates’ own writing and archival documentation provide us with the means to achieve a new understanding of the political encounters played out in courtrooms. Ash’s research material included interwar Home Office circulars that announced the abolition of ‘broad arrow’ prison uniforms in 1920 and responses of prison governors that reveal their continuance after thi...
It is now 60 years since the publication of Penal Policy in a Changing Society, a landmark White Pap...
In the past few years the expansion of digitisation of historical records has allowed increasing acc...
The paper I proposed for this conference developed the theme of how we might derive knowledge from s...
Research for this sole-authored book was undertaken during AHRC-funded Research Leave (2007). It rep...
British prison museums often over-simplify complex social and cultural issues relating to historical...
This article examines the ways in which prison has been seen as both a ‘school of crime’ and a schoo...
A uniform of any kind, whether worn by a fireman, a nurse or a soldier, is designed to inform us abo...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
This article examines the role and training of prison officers in England, between 1877 and 1914. It...
This article will seek to understand how and why many prisoners interpreted in prison museums come f...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
Convicts in Georgian and Victorian Britain experienced notoriously miserable conditions, and perhaps...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
An examination of prison clothing in the Galleries of Justice Galleries archive makes visible the pr...
It is now 60 years since the publication of Penal Policy in a Changing Society, a landmark White Pap...
In the past few years the expansion of digitisation of historical records has allowed increasing acc...
The paper I proposed for this conference developed the theme of how we might derive knowledge from s...
Research for this sole-authored book was undertaken during AHRC-funded Research Leave (2007). It rep...
British prison museums often over-simplify complex social and cultural issues relating to historical...
This article examines the ways in which prison has been seen as both a ‘school of crime’ and a schoo...
A uniform of any kind, whether worn by a fireman, a nurse or a soldier, is designed to inform us abo...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
This article examines the role and training of prison officers in England, between 1877 and 1914. It...
This article will seek to understand how and why many prisoners interpreted in prison museums come f...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
Convicts in Georgian and Victorian Britain experienced notoriously miserable conditions, and perhaps...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
An examination of prison clothing in the Galleries of Justice Galleries archive makes visible the pr...
It is now 60 years since the publication of Penal Policy in a Changing Society, a landmark White Pap...
In the past few years the expansion of digitisation of historical records has allowed increasing acc...
The paper I proposed for this conference developed the theme of how we might derive knowledge from s...