Installieren Sie die genialokal App auf Ihrem Startbildschirm für einen schnellen Zugriff und eine komfortable Nutzung.
Tippen Sie einfach auf Teilen:
Und dann auf "Zum Home-Bildschirm [+]".
Bei genialokal.de kaufen Sie online bei Ihrer lokalen, inhabergeführten Buchhandlung!
Based upon an extensive empirical study of a democratic therapeutic community for women serving long and medium sentences, this book explores the opportunities it provided for restorative rehabilitation. In so doing it identifies some of the interconnected ways in which these ambitions are undermined by pervasive, yet often tacit, assumptions that underly penal policies and practices.
Drawing on a wealth of data gathered from a study spanning a period of eighteen years at the only democratic therapeutic community for women prisoners in the UK, the book highlights how feminist criminology has revealed an invidious history of women's treatment in prison, demonstrating how reformist and rehabilitative interventions have reproduced and exacerbated existing states of inequality and oppression. Consequently, the question explored in this book is whether a proportionate sentence that imposes a loss of liberty is inevitably destined to this fate or whether it can be constructed in ways that are progressive and transformative. By identifying and understanding some of the interconnected ways in which progressive efforts have typically been undermined, it opens a debate about the insinuation of certain, often unspoken, assumptions that underly penal policies and practices and the need for their deconstruction. It opens an axiomatic debate about how women imprisoned for serious offences might have that loss of liberty interpreted to facilitate a restorative, reparative and reintegrative process of rehabilitation, informed by principles of social justice.
This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of criminology, feminist studies, public policy, and human rights. It will also be of value to policymakers and practitioners in women's prisons and psychologists and psychiatrists interested in therapeutic communities.
Elaine Player is Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice in the Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College, London. In addition to two co-authored monographs with Elaine Genders, she has published work on prisons, sentencing and injustices of the criminal process, frequently focusing on their impact on women. She is Chair of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies.
Elaine Genders is Reader in Criminology and Associate Professor of Law in the Faculty of Laws, UCL. She has researched and written in the fields of criminology, criminal justice and the interface between criminology and criminal law. She is co-author, with Elaine Player, of two books on imprisonment, Grendon: A Study of a Therapeutic Prison and Race Relations in Prison.