Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in England and Wales. Drawing upon detailed archival research, this article offers a historical sociology of prison building programmes. It traces the evolution of prison building as a public policy concern and documents how this key site of penal policymaking was interpreted, and contested, by policy actors who were themselves embedded within deep institutional structures of power and meaning. It argues that prison building has moved from the margins to the mainstream of penal policy, shaped by strongly-held convictions about the liberal-democratic state, the competition for control of finite resources and the complex ?geography of administration? th...
This chapter considers the emergence of imprisonment as the predominant form of punishment for the m...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
‘Wicked policy problems’ are defined as complex, not fully understood by policy makers, highly resis...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
It is now 60 years since the publication of Penal Policy in a Changing Society, a landmark White Pap...
This paper synthesises existing work and extends empirical knowledge about the possibilities attenda...
This article seeks to explain the persistence of high incarceration rates in England and Wales. Buil...
Considering the closure of one of the oldest and infamous prisons in London, HM Holloway female pris...
This paper combines archival data and statistical analysis to investigate the context-specific ways ...
This chapter seeks to convey why the architecture and design of prisons is pivotal to a full and nua...
The building of a new ‘super prison' in Wrexham, North Wales has begun amidst a wider expansion of t...
This thesis explores the historical development of early release policy and practice in England and ...
The aim of the paper is to contribute to architectural thought in relation to a specific set of bui...
This article examines the role and training of prison officers in England, between 1877 and 1914. It...
This chapter considers the emergence of imprisonment as the predominant form of punishment for the m...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
‘Wicked policy problems’ are defined as complex, not fully understood by policy makers, highly resis...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
Between 1959 and 2015 the UK government embarked upon five major phases of prison building in Englan...
It is now 60 years since the publication of Penal Policy in a Changing Society, a landmark White Pap...
This paper synthesises existing work and extends empirical knowledge about the possibilities attenda...
This article seeks to explain the persistence of high incarceration rates in England and Wales. Buil...
Considering the closure of one of the oldest and infamous prisons in London, HM Holloway female pris...
This paper combines archival data and statistical analysis to investigate the context-specific ways ...
This chapter seeks to convey why the architecture and design of prisons is pivotal to a full and nua...
The building of a new ‘super prison' in Wrexham, North Wales has begun amidst a wider expansion of t...
This thesis explores the historical development of early release policy and practice in England and ...
The aim of the paper is to contribute to architectural thought in relation to a specific set of bui...
This article examines the role and training of prison officers in England, between 1877 and 1914. It...
This chapter considers the emergence of imprisonment as the predominant form of punishment for the m...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
‘Wicked policy problems’ are defined as complex, not fully understood by policy makers, highly resis...