This article draws on the voices of women political prisoners who were detained at Armagh Prison during the period of the Troubles or the Conflict in Northern Ireland. It focuses on women who undertook an extraordinary form of protest against the prison authorities during the 1980s, known as the No Wash Protest. As the prisoners were prevented from leaving their cells by prison officer either to wash or to use the toilet, the women, living in the midst of their own dirt and body waste, added menstrual blood as a form of protest
Name: Claire LynessTitle: Governing Bodies: Gender and the Politics of Corporeal WeaponizationThis d...
This research paper lies at the intersection of criminal justice, human rights, public health, and w...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a published work that appeared in final form in ...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article, based upon pilot work conducted in a closed women’s prison in England, explores women ...
This article, based upon pilot work conducted in a closed women’s prison in England, explores women ...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
This research paper lies at the intersection of criminal justice, human rights, public health, and w...
In the context of the discourses that shape hegemonic understandings of the Irish nationalist strugg...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the importance of the experiences of fem...
Prisons are places of power and resistance. This article is based on original research material deri...
Prisons are places of power and resistance. This article is based on original research material deri...
This article examines a handkerchief decorated by female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) ...
Name: Claire LynessTitle: Governing Bodies: Gender and the Politics of Corporeal WeaponizationThis d...
This research paper lies at the intersection of criminal justice, human rights, public health, and w...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a published work that appeared in final form in ...
This paper examines how women in the North of Ireland used menstrual blood as a means of resisting ...
Assuming that gender relationships are essential to any analysis of terrorism and political violence...
This article, based upon pilot work conducted in a closed women’s prison in England, explores women ...
This article, based upon pilot work conducted in a closed women’s prison in England, explores women ...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
This research paper lies at the intersection of criminal justice, human rights, public health, and w...
In the context of the discourses that shape hegemonic understandings of the Irish nationalist strugg...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the importance of the experiences of fem...
Prisons are places of power and resistance. This article is based on original research material deri...
Prisons are places of power and resistance. This article is based on original research material deri...
This article examines a handkerchief decorated by female members of the Irish Republican Army (IRA) ...
Name: Claire LynessTitle: Governing Bodies: Gender and the Politics of Corporeal WeaponizationThis d...
This research paper lies at the intersection of criminal justice, human rights, public health, and w...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of a published work that appeared in final form in ...