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This book explores the enduring appeal of child pornography and its
ramifications for criminal justice systems around the world. It is
based on an extensive review of academic literature and newspaper
coverage, a trawl of websites frequented by those with a sexual
interest in children, a survey of how police investigate these
offences, examination of prosecutors' decisions, and interviews
with judges. It provides a framework for understanding the
contemporary nature of this problem, especially the harms it
causes, its intimate relationship with new technologies and the
challenges it poses to law enforcement authorities. The internet
plays a pivotal role. Its sheer size, the anarchic way it grows,
the lack of any boundaries to its expansion and its disregard for
national borders make it a legal environment without parallel. An
unwavering focus on the threat of sexual abuse has contributed to
the emergence of a context where routine dealings with children are
viewed through a 'paedophilic' lens. This can have the unfortunate
consequence of distracting attention from more urgent concerns
(such as poverty and neglect), which make children vulnerable to
sexual exploitation. In this way an emphasis on the sexualisation
of children could be said to aggravate the problem that it sets out
to address. The book: provides a comprehensive analysis of child
pornography issues in all of their complexity, including legal,
psychological, criminal justice and social perspectives. presents
significant volume of original empirical data gathered from police,
prosecutors and judges. includes new qualitative and quantitative
information set against a background of shifting international
developments. The analysis is explicitly comparative. draws on a
variety of sources including support groups for paedophiles,
newspaper coverage of court cases involving child pornography,
victim testimony and police operations.
How prisons around the world shape the social lives of their
inhabitants Prison Life offers a fresh appreciation of how people
in prison organize their lives, drawing on case studies from
Africa, Europe and the US. The book describes how order is
maintained, how power is exercised, how days are spent, and how
meaning is found in a variety of environments that all have the
same function - incarceration - but discharge it very differently.
It is based on an unusually diverse range of sources including
photographs, drawings, court cases, official reports, memoirs, and
site visits. Ian O'Donnell contrasts the soul-destroying isolation
of the federal supermax in Florence, Colorado with the crowded
conviviality of an Ethiopian prison where men and women cook their
own meals, seek opportunities to generate an income, elect a
leadership team, and live according to a code of conduct that they
devised and enforce. He explores life on wings controlled by the
Irish Republican Army in Northern Ireland's H Blocks, where men who
saw the actions that led to their incarceration as
politically-motivated moved as one, in perpetual defiance of the
authorities. He shows how prisoners in Texas took to the courts to
overthrow a regime that allowed their routine subjugation by
violent men known as building tenders, who had been selected by
staff to supervise and discipline their peers. In each case study
O'Donnell presents the life story of a man who was molded by, and
in return molded, the institution that held him. This ensures that
his reflections on law and policy as well as on theory and practice
never lose sight of the human angle. Imprisonment is about pain
after all, and pain is personal.
Prisons are dangerous places, and assaults, threats, theft and
verbal abuse are pervasive - attributable both to the
characteristics of the captive population and to an institutional
sub culture which promotes violence as a means of resolving
conflicts. Yet the crimes perpetrated by prisoners on other
prisoners have attracted little interest, and criminological
research has contributed little to an understanding of situations
in which violence arises in penal institutions. This book seeks to
remedy this, and to address and answer a number of key questions:
how do features of the prison social setting shape conflicts?; what
social norms guide the decision to use violence?; what are the
personal and social consequences of spending months or years in
places where distrust and anxiety are normal?; how do staff respond
to the dangers that are part of daily life in many prisons?; is it
possible to identify factors associated with risk and resilience?;
and what methods of handling conflicts do prisoners use that could
prevent violence? Prison Violence adopts a distinctive approach to
answering these questions, and is based on extensive research,
including interviews with both victims and perpetrators of prison
violence; it pioneers a conflict-centred approach, seeking to
understand the pathways into and out of situations where there is
potential for violence, focusing on interpersonal and institutional
dynamics rather than on individual psychological factors.
This book explores the enduring appeal of child pornography and its
ramifications for criminal justice systems around the world. It is
based on an extensive review of academic literature and newspaper
coverage, a trawl of websites frequented by those with a sexual
interest in children, a survey of how police investigate these
offences, examination of prosecutors' decisions, and interviews
with judges. It provides a framework for understanding the
contemporary nature of this problem, especially the harms it
causes, its intimate relationship with new technologies and the
challenges it poses to law enforcement authorities. The internet
plays a pivotal role. Its sheer size, the anarchic way it grows,
the lack of any boundaries to its expansion and its disregard for
national borders make it a legal environment without parallel. An
unwavering focus on the threat of sexual abuse has contributed to
the emergence of a context where routine dealings with children are
viewed through a 'paedophilic' lens. This can have the unfortunate
consequence of distracting attention from more urgent concerns
(such as poverty and neglect), which make children vulnerable to
sexual exploitation. In this way an emphasis on the sexualisation
of children could be said to aggravate the problem that it sets out
to address. The book: provides a comprehensive analysis of child
pornography issues in all of their complexity, including legal,
psychological, criminal justice and social perspectives. presents
significant volume of original empirical data gathered from police,
prosecutors and judges. includes new qualitative and quantitative
information set against a background of shifting international
developments. The analysis is explicitly comparative. draws on a
variety of sources including support groups for paedophiles,
newspaper coverage of court cases involving child pornography,
victim testimony and police operations.
Prisons are dangerous places, and assaults, threats, theft and
verbal abuse are pervasive - attributable both to the
characteristics of the captive population and to an institutional
sub culture which promotes violence as a means of resolving
conflicts. Yet the crimes perpetrated by prisoners on other
prisoners have attracted little interest, and criminological
research has contributed little to an understanding of situations
in which violence arises in penal institutions. This book seeks to
remedy this, and to address and answer a number of key questions:
how do features of the prison social setting shape conflicts?; what
social norms guide the decision to use violence?; what are the
personal and social consequences of spending months or years in
places where distrust and anxiety are normal?; how do staff respond
to the dangers that are part of daily life in many prisons?; is it
possible to identify factors associated with risk and resilience?;
and what methods of handling conflicts do prisoners use that could
prevent violence? Prison Violence adopts a distinctive approach to
answering these questions, and is based on extensive research,
including interviews with both victims and perpetrators of prison
violence; it pioneers a conflict-centred approach, seeking to
understand the pathways into and out of situations where there is
potential for violence, focusing on interpersonal and institutional
dynamics rather than on individual psychological factors.
This book provides an overview of the incarceration of tens of
thousands of men, women and children during the first fifty years
of Irish independence. Psychiatric hospitals, mother and baby
homes, Magdalen homes, reformatory and industrial schools, prisons
and borstal formed a network of institutions of coercive
confinement that was integral to the emerging state. The book, now
available in paperback after performing superbly in hardback,
provides a wealth of contemporaneous accounts of what life was like
within these austere and forbidding places as well as offering a
compelling explanation for the longevity of the system and the
reasons for its ultimate decline. While many accounts exist of
individual institutions and the factors associated with their
operation, this is the first attempt to provide a holistic account
of the interlocking range of institutions that dominated the
physical landscape and, in many ways, underpinned the rural
economy. Highlighting the overlapping roles of church, state and
family in the maintenance of these forms of social control, this
book will appeal to those interested in understanding
twentieth-century Ireland: in particular, historians, legal
scholars, criminologists, sociologists and other social scientists.
-- .
How prisons around the world shape the social lives of their
inhabitants Prison Life offers a fresh appreciation of how people
in prison organize their lives, drawing on case studies from
Africa, Europe and the US. The book describes how order is
maintained, how power is exercised, how days are spent, and how
meaning is found in a variety of environments that all have the
same function - incarceration - but discharge it very differently.
It is based on an unusually diverse range of sources including
photographs, drawings, court cases, official reports, memoirs, and
site visits. Ian O'Donnell contrasts the soul-destroying isolation
of the federal supermax in Florence, Colorado with the crowded
conviviality of an Ethiopian prison where men and women cook their
own meals, seek opportunities to generate an income, elect a
leadership team, and live according to a code of conduct that they
devised and enforce. He explores life on wings controlled by the
Irish Republican Army in Northern Ireland's H Blocks, where men who
saw the actions that led to their incarceration as
politically-motivated moved as one, in perpetual defiance of the
authorities. He shows how prisoners in Texas took to the courts to
overthrow a regime that allowed their routine subjugation by
violent men known as building tenders, who had been selected by
staff to supervise and discipline their peers. In each case study
O'Donnell presents the life story of a man who was molded by, and
in return molded, the institution that held him. This ensures that
his reflections on law and policy as well as on theory and practice
never lose sight of the human angle. Imprisonment is about pain
after all, and pain is personal.
Examining two overlapping aspects of the prison experience that,
despite their central importance, have not attracted the scholarly
attention they deserve, this book assesses both the degree to which
prisoners can withstand the rigours of solitude and how they
experience the passing of time. In particular, it looks at how they
deal with the potentially overwhelming prospect of a long, or even
indefinite, period behind bars. While the deleterious effects of
penal isolation are well known, little systematic attention has
been given to the factors associated with surviving, and even
triumphing over, prolonged exposure to solitary confinement.
Through a re-examination of the roles of silence and separation in
penal policy, and by contrasting the prisoner experience with that
of individuals who have sought out institutional solitariness (for
example as members of certain religious orders), and others who
have found themselves held in solitary confinement although they
committed no crime (such as hostages and some political prisoners),
Prisoners, Solitude, and Time seeks to assess the impact of
long-term isolation and the rationality of such treatment. In doing
so, it aims to stimulate interest in a somewhat neglected aspect of
the prisoner's psychological world. The book focuses on an aspect
of the prison experience - time, its meanderings, measures, and
meanings - that is seldom considered by academic commentators.
Building upon prisoner narratives, academic critiques, official
publications, personal communications, field visits, administrative
statistics, reports of campaigning bodies, and other data, it
presents a new framework for understanding the prison experience.
The author concludes with a series of reflections on hope, the
search for meaning, posttraumatic growth, and the art of living.
Justice, Mercy, and Caprice is a work of criminal justice history
that speaks to the gradual emergence of a more humane Irish state.
It is a close examination of the decision to grant clemency to men
and women sentenced to death between the end of the civil war in
1923 and the abolition of capital punishment in 1990. Frequently,
the decision to deflect the law from its course was an attempt to
introduce a measure of justice to a system where the mandatory
death sentence for murder caused predictable unfairness and undue
harshness. In some instances the decision to spare a life sprang
from merciful motivations. In others it was capricious, depending
on factors that should have had no place in the government's
decision-making calculus. The custodial careers of those whose
lives were spared repay scrutiny. Women tended to serve relatively
short periods in prison but were often transferred to a religious
institution where their confinement continued, occasionally for
life. Men, by contrast, served longer in prison but were discharged
directly to the community. Political offenders were either executed
hastily or, when the threat of capital punishment had passed,
incarcerated for extravagant periods. This book addresses issues
that are of continuing relevance for countries that employ capital
punishment. It will appeal to scholars with an interest in criminal
justice history, executive discretion, and death penalty studies,
as well as being a useful resource for students of penology.
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