“Life means life” is a mantra of elected state officials who would rather spend already-compromised state budgets on increasing the use of imprisonment as a punishing tool rather than being viewed by their constituents as “soft on crime”. As a result of tough-on-crime initiatives, approximately 160,000 out of 2.2 million inmates being held in jails and prisons in the United States are serving life sentences. While surviving imprisonment is a challenge for most individuals, prisoners who serve long sentences—including “life”—have different adaptation mechanisms, and for them, adaptation is a longer, more complex process. Further, while persons serving life sentences include those who present a serious threat to public safety, they also incl...
This article focuses on the dilemmas of working in prisons with people serving the two most severe s...
In Pennsylvania, life means life without the possibility of parole (“LWOP”) or “death by incarcerati...
In the last thirty years, life without parole (LWOP) sentences have flourished in the United States....
“Life means life” is a mantra of elected state officials who would rather spend already-compromised...
© 2016 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Given the increasing number of prisoners serving life s...
The article is based on my master’s thesis and addresses the issue of the prisonisation of inmates s...
A diverse band of politicians, justice officials, and academic commentators are lending their voices...
Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant pattern of prisoner adaptation...
A reflection on the rise in extremely lengthy life sentences for young adults - what happens to the ...
According to the Sentencing Project (2017), as of 2016, 53,290 people were serving life sentences wi...
Recent theorisations of adaptation to life imprisonment emphasise the role of moral and biographical...
Abstract Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant patter...
Life imprisonment has replaced capital punishment as the most common sentence imposed for heinous cr...
Across the country, life sentences are increasingly being used to replace the death penalty, accordi...
In 1976, the death sentence was abolished and replaced with mandatory life sentences with specified ...
This article focuses on the dilemmas of working in prisons with people serving the two most severe s...
In Pennsylvania, life means life without the possibility of parole (“LWOP”) or “death by incarcerati...
In the last thirty years, life without parole (LWOP) sentences have flourished in the United States....
“Life means life” is a mantra of elected state officials who would rather spend already-compromised...
© 2016 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Given the increasing number of prisoners serving life s...
The article is based on my master’s thesis and addresses the issue of the prisonisation of inmates s...
A diverse band of politicians, justice officials, and academic commentators are lending their voices...
Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant pattern of prisoner adaptation...
A reflection on the rise in extremely lengthy life sentences for young adults - what happens to the ...
According to the Sentencing Project (2017), as of 2016, 53,290 people were serving life sentences wi...
Recent theorisations of adaptation to life imprisonment emphasise the role of moral and biographical...
Abstract Recent studies of long-term imprisonment describe a largely invariant patter...
Life imprisonment has replaced capital punishment as the most common sentence imposed for heinous cr...
Across the country, life sentences are increasingly being used to replace the death penalty, accordi...
In 1976, the death sentence was abolished and replaced with mandatory life sentences with specified ...
This article focuses on the dilemmas of working in prisons with people serving the two most severe s...
In Pennsylvania, life means life without the possibility of parole (“LWOP”) or “death by incarcerati...
In the last thirty years, life without parole (LWOP) sentences have flourished in the United States....