Geographies of precarious work are advanced through an eight month qualitative study of prisoners nearing release from HMP Brixton in London, providing a spatial rendering of working uncertainty. This builds on geographical scholarship highlighting the porosity of prison walls such that carceral space is understood as non-totalising yet extensive. Release on Temporary License (ROTL) is examined as a mechanism of such porosity, allowing offenders to undertake work outside prison. Within the context of the rehabilitation agenda in England and Wales that emphasises the generative function of prison time, we frame the ROTL as a flow mechanism that anticipates both the end of the custodial sentence and precarious work. Experiences of such precar...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
This paper demonstrates for the first time that prisons with a higher proportion of natural vegetati...
© 2019 Cambridge University Press. In this article we engage in a critical examination of how local ...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
Drawing on qualitative interviews with formerly imprisoned people in Canada, we show that most priso...
This paper addresses precarity from a spatial perspective. It draws attention to how power becomes i...
© The Author(s) 2018. This article critiques a case of modern prison-labour by exploring prisoners’ ...
The current Justice Minister David Gauke has recently announced plans to increase the use of workpla...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seeming...
Precarious work is a crucial impediment to substantive equality. This paper examines the regulation ...
Presents the first evidence of forced labour among displaced migrants who seek refuge in the UK. Thr...
This paper tracks the impact of prison transfers (and mobility considerations more generally) on the...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
This paper demonstrates for the first time that prisons with a higher proportion of natural vegetati...
© 2019 Cambridge University Press. In this article we engage in a critical examination of how local ...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
Drawing on qualitative interviews with formerly imprisoned people in Canada, we show that most priso...
This paper addresses precarity from a spatial perspective. It draws attention to how power becomes i...
© The Author(s) 2018. This article critiques a case of modern prison-labour by exploring prisoners’ ...
The current Justice Minister David Gauke has recently announced plans to increase the use of workpla...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via th...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Purpose: The paper aims to consider whether social enterprise, who are growing in number and seeming...
Precarious work is a crucial impediment to substantive equality. This paper examines the regulation ...
Presents the first evidence of forced labour among displaced migrants who seek refuge in the UK. Thr...
This paper tracks the impact of prison transfers (and mobility considerations more generally) on the...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
This paper demonstrates for the first time that prisons with a higher proportion of natural vegetati...
© 2019 Cambridge University Press. In this article we engage in a critical examination of how local ...