This inspiring, well organised, and well attended day was the third and, sadly, the last of three excellent research networking events, each organised by Dr Heather Shore (Leeds Metropolitan University) and Dr Helen Johnston (University of Hull ), and supported by the Arts and Humanities Research Council. As such, it was the third opportunity for scholars, archivists and those engaged in an educational and heritage capacity in museums and prisons who are interested professionally and academically in Our Criminal Past and its future, to gather and hear excellent papers. As usual, and held in a particularly appropriate setting - the Galleries of Justice, Nottingham - the event was attended by over fifty established and newer members of the n...
During a specific period of time, from the 1900s to the 1980s, a small number of files created durin...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Submissions are invited for a conference to be held at the University of Tasmania, 22-24 June 2016 o...
This enlightening and well-attended day was the second of three research networking events, each org...
In the past a huge quantity of material relating to the police and criminal justice system has been ...
This workshop and the attached info-graphic (created by Laura Evans-Hill at Nifty Fox) formed part...
There is growing academic interest in the subject of prison tourism, evident in the forthcoming publ...
This briefing paper provides guidance to the heritage industry on the ethical interpretation of pena...
The Historical Justice and Memory Research Network is a networking platform for scholars, researcher...
The transformation of former prisons into sites of “dark tourism” reflects a recent trend in the use...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
In the past few years the expansion of digitisation of historical records has allowed increasing acc...
On Saturday 14 November 2015 Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery hosted an event which formed part ...
The Tackling Knives Action Programme (TKAP) ran in England and Wales from 2008-2011 and aimed to red...
This research was developed as part of an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award, between the University ...
During a specific period of time, from the 1900s to the 1980s, a small number of files created durin...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Submissions are invited for a conference to be held at the University of Tasmania, 22-24 June 2016 o...
This enlightening and well-attended day was the second of three research networking events, each org...
In the past a huge quantity of material relating to the police and criminal justice system has been ...
This workshop and the attached info-graphic (created by Laura Evans-Hill at Nifty Fox) formed part...
There is growing academic interest in the subject of prison tourism, evident in the forthcoming publ...
This briefing paper provides guidance to the heritage industry on the ethical interpretation of pena...
The Historical Justice and Memory Research Network is a networking platform for scholars, researcher...
The transformation of former prisons into sites of “dark tourism” reflects a recent trend in the use...
University of Plymouth in association with the Institute for Contemporary British History, King’s Co...
In the past few years the expansion of digitisation of historical records has allowed increasing acc...
On Saturday 14 November 2015 Plymouth City Museum and Art Gallery hosted an event which formed part ...
The Tackling Knives Action Programme (TKAP) ran in England and Wales from 2008-2011 and aimed to red...
This research was developed as part of an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award, between the University ...
During a specific period of time, from the 1900s to the 1980s, a small number of files created durin...
This article makes the case for greater use of systematic archival research as a methodological tool...
Submissions are invited for a conference to be held at the University of Tasmania, 22-24 June 2016 o...