This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particular, with the republican inmates’ protests in the 1970s and early 80s. Addressing the penal institution itself, its architecture, interior designs and the rituals implemented there, the paper argues these were not only designed but involved on-going design processes to which inmates responded by the developing a complex design practice involving the site itself as well as their bodies and the way these are made to signify within the semiotic regime of the penal institution
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...
This study explores the prison experience of Ulster loyalist paramilitary prisoners during the 'Tr...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...
This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particu...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
Long Kesh/Maze prison first came to public attention as a short-term solution to prison overcrowding...
Long Kesh/Maze, once Northern Ireland's largest prison, is one of its most important sites of confli...
The former Maze Prison/Long Kesh in Lisburn, near Belfast, is one of the primary sites associated wi...
In both heritage theory and practice, participation is now a key concern. Participation is not a mat...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
As Northern Ireland\u27s landmark Good Friday Agreement approaches its 20-year anniversary, one site...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
Prison design is crucial to the relationship between the ‘carceral’ and the state, in that it is the...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
Abstract: The article discusses graffiti found in Australian prison museums, in particular racist an...
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...
This study explores the prison experience of Ulster loyalist paramilitary prisoners during the 'Tr...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...
This paper engages with the former prison at Long Kesh in Belfast, Northern Ireland, and, in particu...
The prison called both Long Kesh and the Maze is regarded as a symbol of the Northern Ireland confli...
Long Kesh/Maze prison first came to public attention as a short-term solution to prison overcrowding...
Long Kesh/Maze, once Northern Ireland's largest prison, is one of its most important sites of confli...
The former Maze Prison/Long Kesh in Lisburn, near Belfast, is one of the primary sites associated wi...
In both heritage theory and practice, participation is now a key concern. Participation is not a mat...
This paper explores the role of clothing in the hunger strikes in Northern Irish prisons in the 1970...
As Northern Ireland\u27s landmark Good Friday Agreement approaches its 20-year anniversary, one site...
The mass incarceration of Republicans in the North of Ireland was a policy decision that would have ...
Prison design is crucial to the relationship between the ‘carceral’ and the state, in that it is the...
First published online: 29 March 2021Between 1973 and 1977, about 100 Provisional republican prisone...
Abstract: The article discusses graffiti found in Australian prison museums, in particular racist an...
This paper examines the influence of organisations representing “ordinary” prisoners in the Republic...
This study explores the prison experience of Ulster loyalist paramilitary prisoners during the 'Tr...
This article will examine the changing place of architecture and the contested nature of prison spac...