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By the end of the 20th century, the ethnic question had resurfaced
in public debate. Every country had been affected by what is
commonly known as cultural pluralism, as a result of conflicts
interpreted from an ethnic perspective, for instance, in the
Balkans and central Africa; nationalist struggles, such as the
Basque country, Quebec and Belgium; and demands for recognition and
political representation by new ethnic minorities. This resurgence
or extension of the salience of ethnicity in most of the societies
around the world can now be found not only in public discourse,
policy making, scientific literature and popular representation,
but also in the pivotal realm of statistics. This volume explores
the ethnic and racial classification in official statistics as a
reflection of the representations of population, and as an
interpretation of social dynamics through a different lens.
Spanning all continents, a wide range of international authors
discuss how ethnic and racial classifications are built, their
(lack of) accuracy and their contribution to the representation of
ethnic and racial diversity of multicultural societies. This book
was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial
Studies.
This comprehensive workbook addresses the use of illegal online
sexual images. Focusing specifically on child sexual exploitation
materials (CSEM), it offers a clear and professional manual for use
with men who use CSEM. Working with clients who access illegal
online images is challenging work. CSEM clients have unique
characteristics and treatment needs. Designed around practitioner
and client needs, each chapter provides a guide for clinicians and
a subsequent set of materials for the client.. The workbook covers
a range of topics such as motivation for change, relationships,
thinking patterns, emotions management, sexuality, computer use,
Internet safety and future strategies to ensure both client and
community safety. Addressing these issues as well as community
accountability helps users of CSEM achieve a satisfying life while
avoiding future criminal justice involvement. Through this clearly
written and structured workbook, clients are given the resources to
help manage problematic thoughts and/or illegal sexual behaviour.
Offering evidence-based strategies rooted in the authors' clinical
experiences, the workbook enables the practitioner and client to
work productively together to address the issues that have led to
their involvement with illegal sexual images. This book will be
helpful to a range of practitioners including forensic and clinical
psychologists, as well as those working in correctional settings,
such as probation and prison staff, psychiatrists, social workers,
counsellors and providers of mental health treatment. It is also
designed for anyone who has viewed, or is worried about viewing,
sexual images of children.
This comprehensive workbook addresses the use of illegal online
sexual images. Focusing specifically on child sexual exploitation
materials (CSEM), it offers a clear and professional manual for use
with men who use CSEM. Working with clients who access illegal
online images is challenging work. CSEM clients have unique
characteristics and treatment needs. Designed around practitioner
and client needs, each chapter provides a guide for clinicians and
a subsequent set of materials for the client.. The workbook covers
a range of topics such as motivation for change, relationships,
thinking patterns, emotions management, sexuality, computer use,
Internet safety and future strategies to ensure both client and
community safety. Addressing these issues as well as community
accountability helps users of CSEM achieve a satisfying life while
avoiding future criminal justice involvement. Through this clearly
written and structured workbook, clients are given the resources to
help manage problematic thoughts and/or illegal sexual behaviour.
Offering evidence-based strategies rooted in the authors' clinical
experiences, the workbook enables the practitioner and client to
work productively together to address the issues that have led to
their involvement with illegal sexual images. This book will be
helpful to a range of practitioners including forensic and clinical
psychologists, as well as those working in correctional settings,
such as probation and prison staff, psychiatrists, social workers,
counsellors and providers of mental health treatment. It is also
designed for anyone who has viewed, or is worried about viewing,
sexual images of children.
This book reviews the knowledge corpus about access to civil
justice across disciplines and legal traditions and proposes a new
research framework for civil justice reform. This framework is
intended to foster further critical analysis of the justice system
in a systematic and organized way. In particular, the framework
underlines the tensions between different values considered as
central to the civil justice system, and in doing so potentially
allows for conscious, reflected and enlightened choices about the
values that are to be prioritized in the reform of justice systems.
This extensive Handbook addresses a range of contemporary issues
related to Prison Tourism across the world. It is divided into
seven sections: Ethics, Human Rights and Penal Spectatorship;
Carceral Retasking, Curation and Commodification of Punishment;
Meanings of Prison Life and Representations of Punishment in
Tourism Sites; Death and Torture in Prison Museums; Colonialism,
Relics of Empire and Prison Museums; Tourism and Operational
Prisons; and Visitor Consumption and Experiences of Prison Tourism.
The Handbook explores global debates within the field of Prison
Tourism inquiry; spanning a diverse range of topics from political
imprisonment and persecution in Taiwan to interpretive programming
in Alcatraz, and the representation of incarcerated Indigenous
peoples to prison graffiti. This Handbook is the first to present a
thorough examination of Prison Tourism that is truly global in
scope. With contributions from both well-renowned scholars and
up-and-coming researchers in the field, from a wide variety of
disciplines, the Handbook comprises an international collection at
the cutting edge of Prison Tourism studies. Students and teachers
from disciplines ranging from Criminology to Cultural Studies will
find the text invaluable as the definitive work in the field of
Prison Tourism.
This volume is a handbook which contains data dealing with the
characteristics of systems with distributed and lumped parameters.
Some 200 problems are discussed and, for each problem, all the main
characteristics of the solution are listed: standardizing
functions, Green's functions, transfer functions or matrices,
eigenfunctions and eigenvalues with their asymptotics, roots of
characteristic equations, and others. In addition to systems
described by a single differential equation, the handbook also
includes degenerate multiconnected systems. The volume makes it
easier to compare a large number of systems with distributed
parameters. It also points the way to the solution of problems in
the structural theory of distributed-parameter systems. The book
contains three major chapters. Chapter 1 deals with special
descriptions combining concrete and general features of distributed
parameter systems of selected integro-differential equations. Also
presented are the characteristics of simple quantum mechanical
systems, and data for other systems. Chapter 2 presents the
characteristics of systems of differential or integral equations.
Several different multiconnected systems are presented. Chapter 3
describes practical prescriptions for finding and understanding the
characteristics of various classes of distributed systems. The work
should be useful for researchers whose work involves processes in
continuous media, various kinds of field phenomena, problems of
mathematical physics, and the control of distributed-parameter
systems.
By the end of the 20th century, the ethnic question had resurfaced
in public debate. Every country had been affected by what is
commonly known as cultural pluralism, as a result of conflicts
interpreted from an ethnic perspective, for instance, in the
Balkans and central Africa; nationalist struggles, such as the
Basque country, Quebec and Belgium; and demands for recognition and
political representation by new ethnic minorities. This resurgence
or extension of the salience of ethnicity in most of the societies
around the world can now be found not only in public discourse,
policy making, scientific literature and popular representation,
but also in the pivotal realm of statistics. This volume explores
the ethnic and racial classification in official statistics as a
reflection of the representations of population, and as an
interpretation of social dynamics through a different lens.
Spanning all continents, a wide range of international authors
discuss how ethnic and racial classifications are built, their
(lack of) accuracy and their contribution to the representation of
ethnic and racial diversity of multicultural societies. This book
was originally published as a special issue of Ethnic and Racial
Studies.
This open access book examines the question of collecting and
disseminating data on ethnicity and race in order to describe
characteristics of ethnic and racial groups, identify factors of
social and economic integration and implement policies to redress
discrimination. It offers a global perspective on the issue by
looking at race and ethnicity in a wide variety of historical,
country-specific contexts, including Asia, Latin America, Europe,
Oceania and North America. In addition, the book also includes
analysis on the indigenous populations of the Americas. The book
first offers comparative accounts of ethnic statistics. It compares
and empirically tests two perspectives for understanding national
ethnic enumeration practices in a global context based on national
census questionnaires and population registration forms for over
200 countries between 1990 to 2006. Next, the book explores
enumeration and identity politics with chapters that cover the
debate on ethnic and racial statistics in France, ethnic and
linguistic categories in Quebec, Brazilian ethnoracial
classification and affirmative action policies and the
Hispanic/Latino identity and the United States census. The third,
and final, part of the book examines measurement issues and
competing claims. It explores such issues as the complexity of
measuring diversity using Malaysia as an example, social
inequalities and indigenous populations in Mexico and the
demographic explosion of aboriginal populations in Canada from 1986
to 2006. Overall, the book sheds light on four main questions:
should ethnic groups be counted, how should they be counted, who is
and who is not counted and what are the political and economic
incentives for counting. It will be of interest to all students of
race, ethnicity, identity, and immigration. In addition,
researchers as well as policymakers will find useful discussions
and insights for a better understanding of the complexity of
categorization and related political and policy challenges.
Volume 23, Number 1 of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons is a
general issue edited by Professor Justin Piche (University of
Ottawa). In this issue of the JPP, readers will find these three
kinds of contributions that, although in written form, offer
alternative images that make visible that which takes place inside
otherwise opaque prisons. This volume is the first issue of the JPP
that will be fully available online as a free download on our
website www.jpp.org. While readers are encouraged to continue
purchasing subscriptions and hard copies of the journal where
possible as sales sustain the publication, we encourage everyone to
read and circulate the articles posted online widely.
This general issue of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons edited by
Justin Piche and Kevin Walby features articles by current and
former prisoners documenting the latest trends in penal policy and
practice in the United States. The issue also features an article
to "The Dialogue on the Canadian Carceral State" that explores the
punitiveness of Canada's immigration system, a "Response" paper on
the struggle over the future of the decommissioned Prison for Women
(P4W) as a site of memory, as well as "Prisoners' Struggles"
contributions, and a book review. The cover art, featuring the
pieces "Carceral Landscape" and "Close the Bastard Down!", was
created by Peter Collins - a former Canadian prisoner serving a
life sentence who died behind bars of cancer. This book is
published in English.
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 2 (2018) is a special issue of the Journal of
Prisoners on Prisons marking the 20th anniversary of Convict
Criminology (CC) edited by Andreas Aresti and Sacha Darke. Drawing
on auto-ethnographic, action research and other approaches to
qualitative inquiry, the collection features contributions on a
variety of topics, including the criminalization of women, the
place of current and former prisoners in advocacy work concerning
'criminal justice', the role higher education can play in carceral
settings, theorizing the experience of freedom and the deprivation
of liberty, pushing the boundaries of CC through abolitionism and
its internationalisation. This book is published in English.
Enjeux criminologiques contemporains confronte certaines des
questions pressantes relatives aux pratiques pe nales et carce
rales, a la criminologie " clinique ", et au contro le du crime et
ses conse quences. Cet ouvrage pre sente des the ories et des me
thodes a la ne pointe de la recherche, dans le but explicite de
contribuer au de veloppement de politiques qui promeuvent la se
curite et l'inclusion sociale. Les approches et the ories critiques
explore es dans cet ouvrage servent de contrepoint aux approches
d'ordre administratif ou manage rial et aux politiques et pratiques
e tatiques punitives, fonde es sur l'exclusion. De cline en deux
volumes - l'un en franc ais et l'autre en anglais -, ce live
rassemble autant des experts e minents que des chercheurs e
mergents qui, ensemble, o rent une importante contribution a
l'avancement de la recherche et des politiques publiques. Ce livre
est publie en Anglais.
VOLUME 27, NUMBER 1 (2018) is a general issue featuring several
articles examining aging, suffering and death behind the walls.
This edition of the journal also features a section dedicated to
"Continuing the Dialogue on Canada's Federal Penitentiary System"
edited by Jarrod Shook, along with Prisoners' Struggles pieces and
a book review. This book is published in English.
This special issue of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons, titled
"Dialogue on Canada's Federal Penitentiary System and the Need for
Change", features dozens of contributions written by criminalized
men and women currently incarcerated in Correctional Service Canada
(CSC) institutions. The writings document the counterproductive
changes to federal imprisonment made by the previous federal
government. These incarcerated writers seek to contribute to the
reflections of Justice Canada as it conducts a review of the penal
system and to the Standing Senate Committee on Human Rights as it
engages in a study about the treatment of prisoners in CSC
penitentiaries. Individual prisoners and Inmate Committees from CSC
institutions in the Atlantic, Quebec, Ontario, Prairie and Pacific
regions who participated in this dialogue collectively express hope
that the Government of Canada will move away from the punitive
laws, policies, and practices. To this end, the issue includes
several recommendations to be enacted in the short-term to improve
the lives of those who are imprisoned and who work in federal
penitentiaries while also benefitting Canadian society by
contributing to public safety.
Contributors address a range of themes including prisoner
interactions, gender and patriarchal domination in women's prisons,
as well as health care and mental health behind bars.
Edited by Sarah Fiander (Wilfrid Laurier University - Brantford),
Ashley Chen (University of Ottawa) and Justin Piche (University of
Ottawa), Volume 23(2) of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons
features selected papers written by prisoners presented at the
Fifteenth International Conference on Penal Abolition (ICOPA 15)
which discussed prison, abolitionism and reform.
Volume 20, Number 2 is dedicated to the life and contributions of
Liz Elliott, who was an active member of the JPP Editorial Board in
the formative years of the Journal, and a passionate advocate for
prisoners' rights, restorative and social justice. The general
section includes a number of articles that highlight the
socio-politics and experiences of incarceration in the United
States. It also includes two short special sections - one based on
the discussions arising from the June 2010 13th International
Conference on Penal Abolition (ICOPA) in Belfast, Northern Ireland,
and one on 'summit detention' and the mass arrests that occurred
during the June 2010 G-20 protests in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Volume 18(1&2) is a special double issue of the "Journal of
Prisoners on Prisons." Edited by Mike Larsen and Justin Pich?, and
dedicated to the memory of Louk Hulsman, the articles examine a
range of topics, including how language structures relations in
prison, the incarceration of veterans in the USA, life without
parole sentences for both adults and juveniles, three strikes
policies and legal self-representation, the psychological impact of
solitary confinement, prisoners' families, and post-release
adjustment. Running themes include reflections on the relationship
between life and death in carceral settings, as well as critiques
of policies that produce 'disposable' human beings. The issue
continues with a revived Dialogues section featuring five articles
discussing the scholarly merits, limitations, and ethics of prison
ethnography and carceral tours. An extended Prisoners' Struggles
section includes material on a variety of resources, organizations
and events of interest, including reports by the MTL Trans Support
Group, the UN Special Rapporteur on Education, and Julia Sudbury of
Critical Resistance. The issue closes with Book Reviews of works by
Deena Rhymes, Elizabeth Comack and Loic Wacquant.
Volume 17, Number 1 of the Journal of Prisoners on Prisons focuses
on the theme of education inside American and Canadian prisons.
Edited by Justin Pich?, the articles focus on a number of topics
including the barriers to education faced by prisoners, the
obstacles faced by those who wish to develop scholarly knowledge on
imprisonment and the vital role prison writing plays in knowing
inside in the contemporary context.? The "Response "to the issue by
Jon Marc Taylor, who earned his bachelor's, master's and doctoral
degrees while behind bars through correspondence courses,
encourages prisoners and fellow travellers to continue to "fight
the good fight" through prison writing. The "Prisoners' Struggles"
and "Book Reviews" sections include resources for prisoners, along
with contributions from individuals and groups working towards
expanding knowledge inside including Seth Ferranti, Eugene Dey,
books2prisoners Ottawa and the United Nations Special Rapporteur on
Education.
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