This special edition, guest edited by Monica Lloyd and Dr Rachel Bell, looks at the treatment and managment of prisoners with personality disorder.
In this edition:
- Editorial comment, by Monica Lloyd and Dr Rachel Bell
- The Offender Personality Disorder Strategy jointly delivered by NOMS and NHS England, by Nick Benefield, Nick Joseph, Sarah Skett, Sarah Bridgland, Laura d’Cruz, Ian Goode and Kirk Turner
- DSPD ten years on at Broadmoor, by Derek Perkins, Cath Farr, José Romero, Tim Kirkpatrick and Anisah Ebrahimjee
- The Peaks unit: from a pilot for ‘untreatable’ psychopaths to trauma informed milieu therapy, by Lawrence Jones
- Working with Personality Disordered Offenders: responsivity issues and management strategies, by Faye Wood
- Chromis: Beyond the treatment room, by Chris Bull and Jenny Tew
- From Management to Treatment: Changing and Maintaining a Therapeutic Culture in a High Secure Prison, by Des McVey, Naomi Murphy and Jacqui Saradjian
- The provision of PIPEs – Psychologically Informed Planned Environments, by Kirk Turner and Lucinda Bolger
- Implementing an Offender Personality Disorder Strategy for women, by Laura d’Cruz
- Developing personality disorder training – a collaborative process (Co-production as a Process for Developing and Provoking Learning), by Julia Blazdell and Lou Morgan
- Prison Realities: Views from around the world (Special edition of The South Atlantic Quarterly), by Leonidas Cheliotis (Ed) (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)
- Globalisation and the challenge to criminology, by Francis Pakes (Ed) (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)
- Re-imagining imprisonment in Europe: Effects, failures and the future, by Eoin Carroll and Kevin Warner (Eds) (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)
- Pain and Retribution: A Short History of British Prisons 1066 to the Present, by David Wilson (reviewed by Professor Alyson Brown)
- The good prison: Conscience, crime and punishment, by Gerard Lemos (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)
- The last asylum: A memoir of madness in our times, by Barbara Taylor (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)
- Servant of the Crown: A Civil Servant’s story of criminal justice and public sector reform, by David Faulkner (reviewed by Dr Jamie Bennett)