While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has been seen as a key Whig achievement of the 1830s, the Irish precedent enacted by Charles Grant, a liberal Tory chief secretary, in the early 1820s, has gone unnoticed by scholars. The article sets out to trace the Irish prefiguring of this measure and, in the process, to consider prison reform in the United Kingdom in the early nineteenth century in a more transnational manner. A new analysis of the critical years between 1823 and 1835 in both Britain and Ireland based on a detailed examination of parliamentary inquiries and legislation shows how developments in the two countries overlapped and how reforms in one jurisdiction affected the other....
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The origin and the purpose of the Irish penal laws have always been subjects of contention. These la...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
In the nineteenth century, prison became the dominant form of punishment for criminals, as capital a...
In the nineteenth century, prison became the dominant form of punishment for criminals, as capital a...
This chapter focuses on urban governance, urban agency, and civil society with reference to the cons...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
AAM subject to 2 years' embargo.This article examines the experience of English working-class radica...
AAM subject to 2 years' embargo.This article examines the experience of English working-class radica...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The origin and the purpose of the Irish penal laws have always been subjects of contention. These la...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
While the introduction of central-government inspectors for prisons in a British act of 1835 has bee...
In the nineteenth century, prison became the dominant form of punishment for criminals, as capital a...
In the nineteenth century, prison became the dominant form of punishment for criminals, as capital a...
This chapter focuses on urban governance, urban agency, and civil society with reference to the cons...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
This thesis examines crime in nineteenth-century Ireland, with particular focus on female inmates an...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis examines changing English penal practices within...
AAM subject to 2 years' embargo.This article examines the experience of English working-class radica...
AAM subject to 2 years' embargo.This article examines the experience of English working-class radica...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The article explores the early years of the campaign for ‘ordinary’, not politically-aligned, prison...
The origin and the purpose of the Irish penal laws have always been subjects of contention. These la...