This edition of Prison Service Journal combines topical articles on current and proposed reforms to the criminal justice system, and a special focus on disability in prisons.
This edition of Prison Service Journal , guest edited by Karen Harrison and Helen Johnston, brings together a range of articles by academics, practitioners and charitable organisations concerned with young people in custody.
The articles in this edition of Prison Service Journal range from the narrow to the broad, from contemporary to historical and from the local to the global.
The articles in this edition of Prison Service Journal, guest edited by Dr Michael Fiddler, challenge conventional cinematic and literary representations of imprisonment.
This edition of Prison Service Journal , its 200th edition, explores the nature and effects of these transformations in the criminal justice system and wider society over the last four decades. In this edition: Editorial comment New Careers for Ex-offenders , by Andrew Rutherford Reflections on ‘...
All of the articles in this edition of Prison Service Journal provide a means through which the relationship between prisons and society can be understood.
This edition of Prison Service Journal aims to demystify terrorist offending and to build confidence that both operational and correctional skills are equal to working effectively with terrorist offenders.
This edition of Prison Service Journal aims to broaden understanding of detention of foreign nationals in the UK and abroad, with articles exploring life in detention and thepolitics of immigration control in the UK and abroad.