Probation workers are among the least visible in the criminal justice system. Drawing on a pilot photographic project involving probation workers from several European countries, this chapter considers selected photographs and photo-elicitation data from England and Wales and Northern Ireland. It concludes that (amateur, democratized) photography has the potential to empower and give ‘voice’ to practitioners. Further, photo-elicitation suggests that photographs invoke imaginative debate about both the empirical realities and the normative dimensions of probation work and cultures
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...
Visual materials are often neglected by legal researchers. However, as Dominic Janes explains, attit...
Much has been written in England and Wales about the changing nature of work with offenders in the c...
Probation workers are among the least visible in the criminal justice system. Drawing on a pilot pho...
This case study discusses the authors’ experience of using photo-elicitation to explore the lived ex...
This article reports on the application of a visual method in a small-scale comparative study. Prac...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
Participatory visual research methods like Photovoice have become increasingly popular in social sci...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
Participatory visual research methods like Photovoice have become increasingly popular in social sci...
Photography promised 'an enhanced mastery of nature' and was adopted by the police and prison servic...
The use of photography in representing the criminal body has long been a focus of interest in the so...
Despite the expansion of probation supervision, the lived experiences of service users are under-res...
Dynamically written and richly illustrated, the Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminolo...
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...
Visual materials are often neglected by legal researchers. However, as Dominic Janes explains, attit...
Much has been written in England and Wales about the changing nature of work with offenders in the c...
Probation workers are among the least visible in the criminal justice system. Drawing on a pilot pho...
This case study discusses the authors’ experience of using photo-elicitation to explore the lived ex...
This article reports on the application of a visual method in a small-scale comparative study. Prac...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
Participatory visual research methods like Photovoice have become increasingly popular in social sci...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
The lives and experiences of those on probation supervision are often invisible and dismissed as uni...
Participatory visual research methods like Photovoice have become increasingly popular in social sci...
Photography promised 'an enhanced mastery of nature' and was adopted by the police and prison servic...
The use of photography in representing the criminal body has long been a focus of interest in the so...
Despite the expansion of probation supervision, the lived experiences of service users are under-res...
Dynamically written and richly illustrated, the Routledge International Handbook of Visual Criminolo...
A unique series of convict portraits was created at Tasmania’s Port Arthur penal station in 1873 and...
Visual materials are often neglected by legal researchers. However, as Dominic Janes explains, attit...
Much has been written in England and Wales about the changing nature of work with offenders in the c...