9 research outputs found

    La question de la charité et des associations religieuses en Belgique ...

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    Mode of access: Internet

    Du patronage des condamnés libérés.

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    Mode of access: Internet.Bound with: [1] Du patronage des condamnés libérés / Ducpétiaux, Edouard -- [2] Le paupérisme en Belgique causes et remedes / Ducpétiaux, Edouard -- [3] Ueber Armenwesen, Kranker- und Invalidenkassen / Friedrich Harkort -- [4] Mémoire sur les colonies de bienfaisance de Frédériks - Oord et de wortel / J. R. L. De. Kirckhoff -- [5] Della utilita di ordinare i nuovi asili di mandicita / Pasquale Stanislao Mancini -- [6] Der Pauperismus in Flandern / Eduard Moser -- [7] Zur Berliner Armenkrankenpflege / S. Neumann -- [8] Rapport au conseil général des hospices sur le service des enfans-trouvés dans le département de la seine / Conseil général d'administration des hospices (Seine, France) -- [9] Ueber Pauperismus und Proletariat / Friedrich Schmitthenner -- [10] Rapport du maire sur les causes du paupérisme et les moyens les plus convenables

    Mémoire sur le paupérisme dan les Flandres,

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    Mode of access: Internet

    Compte de l'administration de la justice criminelle en Belgique, pendant les années 1831 à 1834.

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    Colonies agricoles,

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    Mode of access: Internet

    Illusions of Utopia: When Prison Architects (Reluctantly) Play Tetris

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    Although prisons are increasingly built away from cities, prison architects are imagining prisons as cities. Such an urban metaphor is perhaps unsurprising; both the prison and the city are often assumed to be relatively bounded places, prisons arguably resembling self-sufficient cities with facilities such as accommodation, classrooms, workshops, laundries, health clinics and gardens contained within their walls. The vocabulary of the city is also pervasive when justifying prison architecture. In this chapter we consider why prison architects use the metaphor of the city to describe the prisons they design, using terminology such as ‘walled bungalows’, ‘penitentiary houses’, ‘vertical prisons’ and ‘cell apartments’, and we examine the significance of this rather dystopian urban imaginary in allowing architects to retain some agency within a design process which minimises their creative and political input
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