For decades we have imagined that if only community alternatives to imprisonment could be sold as more credible then the use of imprisonment will fall. It is a seductive logic. Yet instead what we have seen is increases in both community ‘alternatives’ and imprisonment, while the use of the fine has plummeted. Although it sounds progressive, the prevailing approach that ‘custody is a last resort’ ends up meaning in practice that imprisonment becomes the default. This article proposes a way out of this problem
Are closely comparable countries following the path forged by England and Wales by moving towards th...
This research report reviews the range of alternatives to custody across the UK, from bail, through...
This article seeks to explain the persistence of high incarceration rates in England and Wales. Buil...
For decades we have imagined that if only community alternatives to imprisonment could be sold as mo...
Currently, Scotland has one of the highest proportionate rates of imprisonment in Western Europe, wh...
More people are serving life sentences in Scotland as a proportion of the national population than i...
Scotland's prison population remains stubbornly high despite reforms to sentencing and community pen...
A central aim of successive generations of penal reformers and governments has been to reduce the us...
How should prison sentencing in relatively less serious cases be reduced? Generations of reform-mind...
In late 2007, and in the face of a high imprisonment rate and unmitigated growth in the prison popul...
Despite a substantial knowledge base about experiences of prison, there is scant research on the mos...
This article seeks to explain the reasons for the sharp rise in prison recall rates in Scotland. It ...
There has been considerable recent debate about overcrowding in UK prisons. The system is struggling...
The Scottish Prison Service is transforming itself by focusing more on rehabilitation. This is a wel...
Recently, the Justice Secretary, Liz Truss, suggested the prison system in England and Wales should ...
Are closely comparable countries following the path forged by England and Wales by moving towards th...
This research report reviews the range of alternatives to custody across the UK, from bail, through...
This article seeks to explain the persistence of high incarceration rates in England and Wales. Buil...
For decades we have imagined that if only community alternatives to imprisonment could be sold as mo...
Currently, Scotland has one of the highest proportionate rates of imprisonment in Western Europe, wh...
More people are serving life sentences in Scotland as a proportion of the national population than i...
Scotland's prison population remains stubbornly high despite reforms to sentencing and community pen...
A central aim of successive generations of penal reformers and governments has been to reduce the us...
How should prison sentencing in relatively less serious cases be reduced? Generations of reform-mind...
In late 2007, and in the face of a high imprisonment rate and unmitigated growth in the prison popul...
Despite a substantial knowledge base about experiences of prison, there is scant research on the mos...
This article seeks to explain the reasons for the sharp rise in prison recall rates in Scotland. It ...
There has been considerable recent debate about overcrowding in UK prisons. The system is struggling...
The Scottish Prison Service is transforming itself by focusing more on rehabilitation. This is a wel...
Recently, the Justice Secretary, Liz Truss, suggested the prison system in England and Wales should ...
Are closely comparable countries following the path forged by England and Wales by moving towards th...
This research report reviews the range of alternatives to custody across the UK, from bail, through...
This article seeks to explain the persistence of high incarceration rates in England and Wales. Buil...