In-cell television is now a permanent feature of prisons in England and Wales, and a key part of the experience of modern incarceration. This sociological exploration of prisoners' use of television offers an engaging and thought provoking insight into the domestic and everyday lives of people in prison - with television close at hand. Victoria Knight explores how television contributes to imprisonment by normalising the prison cell. In doing so it legitimates this space to hold prisoners for long periods of time, typically without structured activity. As a consequence, television's place in the modern prison has also come to represent an unanticipated resource in the package of care for prisoners. This book uncovers the complex and ric...
Background: Prisons in Belgium are increasingly affected by the digital turn, which challenges livin...
This article argues that the populist and highly punitive penal policy in the UK is promoted by medi...
The aim of thesis The use of media in men's prison is to uncover the relationship between prisoners ...
The chapter considers developments in the contemporary technology of the prison and some emerging re...
This article describes the precarious and sensitive relationship prisoners have with television; it ...
This book is concerned with the media's role in everyday life, power relations and the construction ...
This article reports on an ethnographic study focusing on the impact of in-cell television on prison...
This article examines the provision of television in the South Australian prison system and its impo...
This article is the copyright of Common Ground Publishing. Permission for reproducing this article s...
During the latter part of the twentieth century, the prison population in the United States rose to ...
Not all “bad news” about prisons is necessarily bad. Negative framing may, in fact, be reflective of...
Technological linkages between justice and law enforcement agencies are radically altering criminal ...
This paper explores the transition from ‘visible’ to ‘invisible’ modes of penal punishment via the s...
Prison radio is a particularly valuable contribution to the investigation of opportunities for socia...
Lies, distortion and what doesn’t work: Monitoring prison stories in the British media PAUL MASON, C...
Background: Prisons in Belgium are increasingly affected by the digital turn, which challenges livin...
This article argues that the populist and highly punitive penal policy in the UK is promoted by medi...
The aim of thesis The use of media in men's prison is to uncover the relationship between prisoners ...
The chapter considers developments in the contemporary technology of the prison and some emerging re...
This article describes the precarious and sensitive relationship prisoners have with television; it ...
This book is concerned with the media's role in everyday life, power relations and the construction ...
This article reports on an ethnographic study focusing on the impact of in-cell television on prison...
This article examines the provision of television in the South Australian prison system and its impo...
This article is the copyright of Common Ground Publishing. Permission for reproducing this article s...
During the latter part of the twentieth century, the prison population in the United States rose to ...
Not all “bad news” about prisons is necessarily bad. Negative framing may, in fact, be reflective of...
Technological linkages between justice and law enforcement agencies are radically altering criminal ...
This paper explores the transition from ‘visible’ to ‘invisible’ modes of penal punishment via the s...
Prison radio is a particularly valuable contribution to the investigation of opportunities for socia...
Lies, distortion and what doesn’t work: Monitoring prison stories in the British media PAUL MASON, C...
Background: Prisons in Belgium are increasingly affected by the digital turn, which challenges livin...
This article argues that the populist and highly punitive penal policy in the UK is promoted by medi...
The aim of thesis The use of media in men's prison is to uncover the relationship between prisoners ...