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Jewkes

Prisons and Punishment

Medium: Buch
ISBN: 978-1-84787-023-0
Verlag: Repro India Limited
Erscheinungstermin: 22.09.2008
Lieferfrist: bis zu 10 Tage
Prisons and Punishment provides a critical introduction to the main debates and dilemmas associated with prisons, imprisonment and punishment, and will acquaint readers with the most interesting and influential literature that has shaped the field. The three-volume set of original classic and contemporary readings is designed to introduce readers to the history and development of prisons, to contemporary theories and issues relating to prison populations, to sociological and psychological literature on the 'effects' of imprisonment, to debates about the management and privatisation of the prison estate and to controversial issues and emerging trends in punishment across the globe. Prisons and Punishment is particularly timely because of the exponentially growing prison populations in many countries and because of new cultures of control which are criminalizing increasing numbers of people and creating a crisis in the penal system. Volume 1 The Meaning of the Prison: Punishment in an Historical and Comparative Context outlines the emergence of the modern prison and explores differing contemporary models of imprisonment in various parts of the world. Volume 2 Prisoners and Prison Communities explores the pervasive characteristics and 'effects' of imprisonment from sociological and psychological perspectives. It discusses life in prison for all its occupants, and also considers the effects of imprisonment on prisoners' families. Volume 3 Punishment: Controversial Issues and Emerging Debates examines prisons in market societies, covering recent moves towards increasing managerialism and greater accountability, prison inspection and human rights issues. It looks at some of the most controversial issues and problems blighting prison systems around the world and discusses the notion of a 'carceral society'. Prisons and Punishment is the definitive tool with which to navigate the fields of penology and prison studies. Each volume in this definitive set includes an introduction by the editor.

Produkteigenschaften


  • Artikelnummer: 9781847870230
  • Medium: Buch
  • ISBN: 978-1-84787-023-0
  • Verlag: Repro India Limited
  • Erscheinungstermin: 22.09.2008
  • Sprache(n): Englisch
  • Auflage: Third Auflage
  • Serie: SAGE Library of Criminology
  • Produktform: Kartoniert
  • Gewicht: 2155 g
  • Seiten: 1184
  • Format (B x H x T): 156 x 234 x 13 mm
  • Ausgabetyp: Kein, Unbekannt

Autoren/Hrsg.

Herausgeber

Jewkes, Yvonne

Yvonne Jewkes is Professor of Criminology at the University of Bath and Honorary Visiting Professor at the University of Melbourne. She has been carrying out prison research—much of it ethnography—for over 20 years and has spent the last decade researching and writing about prison architecture and design and their potential to rehabilitate. She has recently held two Economic and Social Research Council grants to study these topics and has worked as a consultant to prison architects and senior prison service personnel around the world. She has published extensively on various aspects of prisons and imprisonment, including (with Ben Crewe and Jamie Bennett) The Handbook on Prisons (2nd ed., 2016, Routledge). With Ben Crewe and Thomas Ugelvik, she is the Founding Editor of the new SAGE journal Incarceration.

VOLUME 1: THE MEANING OF THE PRISON
Part 1: Punishment in a Time of Social, Cultural and Economic Change
Social Change and Social Order in Late Modernity
Understanding Prison Policy and Population Trends - D. Garland
What is Penal Populism? - T. Caplow and J. Simon
Introducing Comparative Penology - Pratt, J.
Opposing Outcomes of the Industrial Prison: Japan and the United States Compared - M. Cavadino and J. Dignan
Barter: Russia's 'Penal Micro-Economy' - E.H. Johnson
Part 2: Diverse Approaches to Understanding Imprisonment - L. Piacentini
The Proper Use of Imprisonment
From Nothing Works to What Works: Changing professional ideology in the 21st Century - R. Morgan
Therapy at Grendon - F.T. Cullen and P. Gendreau
The New Generation Jail: An Overview - E. Genders and E. Player
Can Prisons Be Legitimate? Penal Politics, Privatisation and the Timeliness of an Old Idea - L.L. Zupan and B.A. Menke
Part 3: Managerialism and the Market - R. Sparks
The New Penology: Notes on the Emerging Strategy of Corrections and its Implications
Crime Control as a Product - M. Feeley and J. Simon
Crime as Good Business: The impact of the free market - N. Christie
Punishment, Markets and the American Model: An essay on a new American dilemma - V. Stern
Juvenile Crime Pays - But at What Cost - M. Andrews
VOLUME TWO: PRISONERS AND PRISON COMMUNITIES - A. Friedman
Part 1: The 'Characteristics' of Imprisonment
On the Characteristics of Total Institutions: The inmate world
The Pains of Imprisonment - E. Goffman
The Closed Emotional World of the Security Wing - G. Sykes
The Disrupted Society - S. Cohen and L. Taylor
Fear and Vulnerability - T. Mathiesen
Part 2 Coping, Adaptation and Resistance - K. Edgar, I. O'donnell and C. Martin
The First Cut is the Deepest: Psychological breakdown and survival in the detention setting
Behavior and Adaptation in Long-Term Prison Inmates: Descriptive longitudinal results - J.J. Gibbs
The Changing Nature of Interpersonal Relationships in a Women's Prison - E. Zamble
Resistance and Violence: Power, Intimidation and Control of Space - K.R. Greer
Prison Riots in the US - K. Mcevoy
Part 3: The 'Other' Prison Population: Officers and governors - Robert Adams
Degradation
Transition of the Guard Force - J. Irwin
Mind Games: Where the action is in prisons - J. Jacobs
Them and US? How Officers See Prisoners - K. Mcdermott and R. King
Managing Prisons: A difficult public profession - E. Crawley
VOLUME 3: PUNISHMENT: CONTROVERSIAL ISSUES AND EMERGING DEBATES - A. Coyle
Part 1: The 'New Punitiveness'
Project Exile: Race, the war on crime and mass imprisonment
Supermax Meets Death Row: Legal struggles around the new punitiveness in the US - J. Simon
The Myth of Punitiveness - M. Lynch
Engaging with Punitive Attitudes towards Crime and Punishment: Some strategic lessons from England and Wales - R. Matthews
Part 2: Social Exclusion, Bias and Imprisonment - M. Ryan
Bias in the Criminal Justice System
Scars - M. Cavadino and J. Dignan
Prisoner Society in the Era of Hard Drugs - J. Masters
Men Behind Bars: "Doing" Masculinity as an Adaptation to Imprisonment - B. Crewe
Understanding How Race, Class, and Gender Impact the Health of Incarcerated Women - Y. Jewkes
Work, Training, Education - R. L. Braithwaite
Prisoner Reentry: Public safety and reintegration challenges - R.P. Dobash, R.E. Dobash and S. Gutteridge
Part 3: Alternative Approaches to Punishment: The expanding carceral net? - J. Petersilia
Campaigning For And Campaigning Against Prisons: Excavating and Re-Affirming S The Case for Prison Abolition
Prisoners' Rights in the Context of the European Convention on Human Rights - M. Ryan and J. Sim
Reparative and Restorative Approaches - S. Livingstone
Demanding but not Degrading? The Appeal of Community Punishment and Electronic Monitoring