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This book focuses on the emotional experience of imprisonment. In
no uncertain terms: prisons seethe with emotions and feelings.
Based on two empirically rigorous studies, this book analyses how
prisoners attempt to adapt and control their emotions. It begins
with an account of male and female prisoners held in
medium-security prisons and then moves to the particular case of
emotions in solitary confinement. There has been a turn towards
emotions in criminology but this is the first book to centralize
the subject of prisoner emotions in a detailed manner. The
ethnographic study of feelings has much to contribute to broader
debates about survival in prison and pathways to desistence. Most
importantly, it emphasizes that 'full-blooded' depictions of
prisoners belong at the heart of academic inquiry.
In 2003 Ben Law captivated the nation by building his woodland
house on Channel 4s Grand Designs programme, the home was later
voted the most popular Grand Design ever by viewers. The presenter,
Kevin McCloud, loved the project so much that he has written the
foreword to this book! A Grand Designs Revisited programme was
aired on British TV in October 2005. Full of stunning colour
photographs, The Woodland House is a visual guide to how Ben built
his outstandingly beautiful home in the woods. It is also a
practical manual, and the story of a man realising a lifetimes
dream to build one of the most sustainable and beautiful homes in
Britain. The Woodland House gives details of the evolving design
process, the identifying of materials, costings, project management
and the actual building. It proves that low cost, low impact and
high aesthetics can go hand in hand and that it is possible to
build green and affordably. As the pre-eminent UK example of
building with wood and renewable materials this will also appeal to
the growing number of people with environmental and green
interests, as well as to the building community
A book for everyone who loves trees and woodlands...This 2015
edition of the 2001 classic is written from the heart by an
innovative woodsman who is deeply committed to sustainability, this
radical book presents an immensely practical alternative to
conventional woodland management. Through his personal experience,
Ben Law clearly demonstrates how you can create biodiverse, healthy
environments, yield a great variety of value added products,
provide secure livelihoods for woodland workers and farmers, and
benefit the local community. He argues the case for a new approach
to planning, encouraging the creation of permaculture woodlands for
the benefit of people, the local environment and the global
climate.
This book focuses on the emotional experience of imprisonment. In
no uncertain terms: prisons seethe with emotions and feelings.
Based on two empirically rigorous studies, this book analyses how
prisoners attempt to adapt and control their emotions. It begins
with an account of male and female prisoners held in
medium-security prisons and then moves to the particular case of
emotions in solitary confinement. There has been a turn towards
emotions in criminology but this is the first book to centralize
the subject of prisoner emotions in a detailed manner. The
ethnographic study of feelings has much to contribute to broader
debates about survival in prison and pathways to desistence. Most
importantly, it emphasizes that ‘full-blooded’ depictions of
prisoners belong at the heart of academic inquiry.
Since building his famous Woodland House from his own woodland,
author Ben Law has evolved his own style of natural building, now
tried and tested on many other builds across England. Ben has built
houses, workshops, a classroom, lean-tos, a shop and a store to
industrial specifications. Whilst this style's origins can be found
in traditional forms of building, Ben has developed an entirely new
vernacular using many innovative ideas and techniques. Filled with
detailed colour photographs and drawings, this unique and practical
`how to' book, is unquestionably a benchmark for sustainable
building. Roundwood Timber Framing encourages communication between
woodsmen, planners, architects and builders, and helps to close the
loop between environmental conservation, use of renewable local
resources and the regeneration and evolution of traditional skills,
to create durable, ecological and beautiful buildings. Ben is a now
a much admired figure. His previous books have sold extremely well
and this book, with its highly original and fascinating
contribution to design and build, is set to capture the public's
imagination and desire to increasingly learn traditional crafts.
Ben Law's incredible sense of the land and his respect for age old
traditions offers a wonderful insight into the life of Prickly Nut
Wood. Having travelled to Papua New Guinea and the Amazon,
observing age-old techniques for living in, working in and
preserving forests and woodland, Ben Law felt compelled to return
home and apply his learnings to a 400-year-old plot of woodland
near where he grew up - Prickly Nut Wood. This is the story of how
he came to know and love his woodland, how he lived off the land,
how he coppiced and hedged and created charcoal, how he puddled and
built shelter, and finally how he carved out his famous,
characterful woodland home that Kevin McCloud has cited as his
favourite ever Grand Design.
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