This chapter is focussed on the obstacles and myths preventing the acknowledgement of the insidious role of penal confinement in maintaining social and economic inequalities. What attracts people to the continued use of the prison? Why do prisons have such a stronghold on the hearts and minds of the general public as the only means by which society can maintain order and a system of justice? Many previous critics of the prison have systematically dissected the apparent functions of the prison, juxtaposing its supposed and symbolic purposes against its harsh and destructive realities. Consequently, the authors consider where the debates on the prison keep getting stuck, why human societies seem to be unable to move beyond the prison and what...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
This paper identifies and critically assesses old and new challenges that, we argue, must be reckone...
The aim of this chapter is to consider if the much-publicised ‘causal relationship’ between prison o...
This chapter explores how prisons in England and Wales are haunted by the presence of death. It deta...
JM Moore argues that prison works very well in maintaining an unjust society and deflecting attentio...
An incisive and sympathetic examination of the case for ending the practice of imprisonment. Despite...
In this article, I argue that the kind of suffering that prisons impose upon people who are incarcer...
Penal abolitionism is a way of seeing and understanding the world that is grounded in values that ch...
Prison abolitionism is nearly as old as the prison itself. Yet, despite almost century-long efforts ...
This chapter confronts the idea of ‘the’ prison, that is, prison as a fixed entity. However hard we,...
This article introduces to legal scholarship the first sustained discussion of prison abolition and ...
The article examines the compatibility of the international human rights regime with penal abolition...
Graduation date: 2012Current calls for prison abolition have been met with major public resistance.\...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition provides an authoritative and comprehensive ...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
This paper identifies and critically assesses old and new challenges that, we argue, must be reckone...
The aim of this chapter is to consider if the much-publicised ‘causal relationship’ between prison o...
This chapter explores how prisons in England and Wales are haunted by the presence of death. It deta...
JM Moore argues that prison works very well in maintaining an unjust society and deflecting attentio...
An incisive and sympathetic examination of the case for ending the practice of imprisonment. Despite...
In this article, I argue that the kind of suffering that prisons impose upon people who are incarcer...
Penal abolitionism is a way of seeing and understanding the world that is grounded in values that ch...
Prison abolitionism is nearly as old as the prison itself. Yet, despite almost century-long efforts ...
This chapter confronts the idea of ‘the’ prison, that is, prison as a fixed entity. However hard we,...
This article introduces to legal scholarship the first sustained discussion of prison abolition and ...
The article examines the compatibility of the international human rights regime with penal abolition...
Graduation date: 2012Current calls for prison abolition have been met with major public resistance.\...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
The Routledge International Handbook of Penal Abolition provides an authoritative and comprehensive ...
The United States is finally recoiling from the mass incarceration crisis that has plagued it for ha...
This paper identifies and critically assesses old and new challenges that, we argue, must be reckone...
The aim of this chapter is to consider if the much-publicised ‘causal relationship’ between prison o...