The Palgrave Handbook of Prison and the Family

Lieferzeit: Lieferbar innerhalb 14 Tagen

213,99 

Palgrave Studies in Prisons and Penology

ISBN: 3030127435
ISBN 13: 9783030127435
Herausgeber: Marie Hutton/Dominique Moran
Verlag: Springer Verlag GmbH
Umfang: xxiii, 525 S., 7 s/w Illustr., 525 p. 7 illus.
Erscheinungsdatum: 24.06.2019
Auflage: 1/2019
Produktform: Gebunden/Hardback
Einband: GEB

This handbook brings together the international research focussing on prisoners‘ families and the impact of imprisonment on them. Under-researched and under-theorised in the realm of scholarship on imprisonment, this handbook encompasses a broad range of original, interdisciplinary and cross-national research. This volume includes the experiences of those from countries often unrepresented in the prisoner’s families‘ literature such as Russia, Australia, Israel and Canada. This broad coverage allows readers to consider how prisoners‘ families are affected by imprisonment in countries embracing very different penal philosophies; ranging from the hyper-incarceration being experienced in the USA to the less punitive, more welfare-orientated practices under Scandinavian ‚exceptionalism‘. Chapters are contributed by scholars from numerous and diverse disciplines ranging from law, nursing, criminology, psychology, human geography, and education studies. Furthermore, contributions span various methodological and epistemological approaches with important contributions from NGOs working in this area at a national and supranational level. The Palgrave Handbook of Prison and the Family makes a significant contribution to knowledge about who prisoners‘ families are and what this status means in practice. It also recognises the autonomy and value of prisoners‘ families as a research subject in their own right.

Artikelnummer: 6209561 Kategorie:

Beschreibung

Autorenporträt

Marie Hutton is lecturer in law at the University of Sussex, UK. Driven by her own experiences of familial imprisonment, Marie's research focusses on the lived experience of family contact in prisons and human rights from a socio-legal perspective. Dominique Moran is Reader in Carceral Geography at the University of Birmingham. Her work is transdisciplinary, informed by and extending theoretical developments in geography, criminology and prison sociology, but also interfacing with contemporary debates over hyper-incarceration, recidivism and the advance of the punitive state. She has completed an interdisciplinary ESRC research project looking into women's experience of imprisonment in contemporary Ru`ssia.

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen …