This article reports on part of a project that introduced philosophy programmes to a number of Scottish prisons. It centres on the deployment within these prisons of McCall’s (1991) Community of Philosophical Inquiry (CoPI). It provides a rationale for, and analyses the participation structure, of CoPI, setting out how its communicative constraints and demands provided prisoners with novel means of reasoning and engaging in dialogue with others and with oneself. In interviews conducted with a sample of participants, they described how the critical listening to, and reasoning with, each other in CoPI tutorials had allowed them to develop greater self-awareness and a more reflexive understanding of their own thinking and actions. Findings are...
This thesis concerns the paradox of Higher Education in prisons - paradox because the aims, practice...
This study focussed on prisoner learning within Tasmanian adult prisons. This thesis was undertaken ...
In 1971, when the Open University’s (OU’s) first dedicated television programmes were broadcast and ...
This article argues that providing a forum for philosophical conversation within prison education is...
Delivered through the medium of a Community of Philosophical Inquiry, this thesis outlines the exper...
There have recently been a series of prominent projects in the UK that aim to bring philosophy into ...
Why do public philosophy in prisons? When we think about the value and aims of public philosophy the...
I argue in this article that people in prison make excellent philosophers, for reasons related to wh...
Based on the author’s experience of teaching on a higher education project in two English prisons - ...
Prime Minister David Cameron noted in his speech about prison reform that education in prison shoul...
Abstract: In this paper we discuss how through our bi-weekly Socrati...
We critically reflect on insights from our experiences as female researchers on a creative writing p...
The prisoner constituency is one of the most excluded in society. Addressing recidivism requires amo...
This article explores the concept of philosophical education as a practice of subjectivation within ...
This paper makes explicit processes of collaboration in a learning community partnership between Cor...
This thesis concerns the paradox of Higher Education in prisons - paradox because the aims, practice...
This study focussed on prisoner learning within Tasmanian adult prisons. This thesis was undertaken ...
In 1971, when the Open University’s (OU’s) first dedicated television programmes were broadcast and ...
This article argues that providing a forum for philosophical conversation within prison education is...
Delivered through the medium of a Community of Philosophical Inquiry, this thesis outlines the exper...
There have recently been a series of prominent projects in the UK that aim to bring philosophy into ...
Why do public philosophy in prisons? When we think about the value and aims of public philosophy the...
I argue in this article that people in prison make excellent philosophers, for reasons related to wh...
Based on the author’s experience of teaching on a higher education project in two English prisons - ...
Prime Minister David Cameron noted in his speech about prison reform that education in prison shoul...
Abstract: In this paper we discuss how through our bi-weekly Socrati...
We critically reflect on insights from our experiences as female researchers on a creative writing p...
The prisoner constituency is one of the most excluded in society. Addressing recidivism requires amo...
This article explores the concept of philosophical education as a practice of subjectivation within ...
This paper makes explicit processes of collaboration in a learning community partnership between Cor...
This thesis concerns the paradox of Higher Education in prisons - paradox because the aims, practice...
This study focussed on prisoner learning within Tasmanian adult prisons. This thesis was undertaken ...
In 1971, when the Open University’s (OU’s) first dedicated television programmes were broadcast and ...