451 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
The Gendered Pains of Life Imprisonment
As many scholars have noted, women remain peripheral in most analyses of the practices and effects of imprisonment. This article aims to redress this pattern by comparing the problems of long-term confinement as experienced by male and female prisoners, and then detailing the most significant and distinctive problems reported by the latter. It begins by reporting data that illustrate that the women report an acutely more painful experience than their male counterparts. It then focuses on the issues that were of particular salience to the women: loss of contact with family members; power, autonomy and control; psychological well-being and mental health; and matters of trust, privacy and intimacy. The article concludes that understanding how women experience long sentences is not possible without grasping the multiplicity of abuse that the great majority have experienced in the community, or without recognizing their emotional commitments and biographies.This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ES/J007935/1) and the Isaac Newton Trust
Making Sense of 'Joint Enterprise' for Murder: Legal Legitimacy or Instrumental Acquiescence?
AbstractThe legal doctrine of ‘joint enterprise’ has been heavily criticized for lacking legitimacy, primarily linked to distributive (in)justice. This paper draws on the narratives of ‘joint enterprise prisoners’ serving long life sentences for murder to address such concerns and extend the discussion to questions of ‘legal legitimacy’. Prisoners who were early in their sentences explicitly rejected the legal legitimacy of joint enterprise, while those at a later stage reported ‘accepting’ their conviction and demonstrated ‘consent’ by engaging with their sentence. We argue that rather than representing normative acceptance of the legal legitimacy of joint enterprise over time, this acceptance is a form of instrumental acquiescence associated with ‘dull compulsion’ ‘coping acceptance’ and personal meaning making.Isaac Newton Trus
Recommended from our members
Staff-prisoner relationships, staff professionalism, and the use of authority in public- and private-sector prisons
Prison privatization has generally been associated with developments in
neoliberal punishment. However, relatively little is known about the
specific impact of privatization on the daily life of prisoners, including
areas that are particularly salient not just to debates about neoliberal
penality, but the wider reconfiguration of public service provision and
frontline work. Drawing on a study of values, practices, and quality of life
in five private‐sector and two public‐sector prisons in England and Wales,
this article seeks to compare and explain three key domains of prison
culture and quality: relationships between frontline staff and prisoners,
levels of staff professionalism (or jailcraft), and prisoners' experience of
state authority. The study identifies some of the characteristic strengths
and weaknesses of the public and private prison sectors, particularly in
relation to staff professionalism and its impact on the prisoner experience.
These findings have relevance beyond the sphere of prisons and
punishment.This is the final version. It was first published by Wiley at onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/lsi.12093/abstrac
The effect of prolonged simulated non- gravitational environment on mineral balance in the adult male, volume 1 Final report
Effect of prolonged bed rest with simulated weightlessness on mineral balance in male adult - Vol.
Recommended from our members
Re-examining the Problems of Long-term Imprisonment
Drawing on an amended version of a survey employed in three previous studies, this article reports the problems experienced by 294 male prisoners serving very long life sentences received when aged 25 or under. The broad findings are consistent with previous work, including few differences being found between the problems experienced as most and least severe by prisoners at different sentence stages. By grouping the problems into conceptual dimensions, and by drawing on interviews conducted with 126 male prisoners, we seek to provide a more nuanced analysis of this pattern. We argue that, while earlier scholars concluded that the effects of long-term confinement were not ‘cumulative’ and ‘deleterious’, adaptation to long-term imprisonment has a deep and profound impact on the prisoner, so that the process of coping leads to fundamental changes in the self, which go far beyond the attitudinal.This work was supported by the Economic and Social Research Council (ES/J007935/1)
Swimming with the Tide: Adapting to Long-Term Imprisonment
© 2016 Academy of Criminal Justice Sciences. Given the increasing number of prisoners serving life sentences in England and Wales, and the increasing average length of these sentences, it is surprising that so little attention has been paid to the experiences and effects of such sanctions. This article describes how prisoners serving very long sentences from an early age adapt over time to their circumstances. In particular, it focuses on the transition between the early and subsequent stages of such sentences, specifically, the ways that these prisoners adapt to the sentence, manage time, come to terms with their offense, shift their conception of control, make their sentence constructive, and find wider meaning in and from their predicament. Our argument is that most prisoners demonstrate a shift from a form of agency that is reactive to one that is productive, as they learn to “swim with”, rather than against, the tide of their situation
Prevention of bone mineral changes induced by bed rest: Modification by static compression simulating weight bearing, combined supplementation of oral calcium and phosphate, calcitonin injections, oscillating compression, the oral diophosphonatedisodium etidronate, and lower body negative pressure
The phenomenon of calcium loss during bed rest was found to be analogous to the loss of bone material which occurs in the hypogravic environment of space flight. Ways of preventing this occurrence are investigated. A group of healthy adult males underwent 24-30 weeks of continuous bed rest. Some of them were given an exercise program designed to resemble normal ambulatory activity; another subgroup was fed supplemental potassium phosphate. The results from a 12-week period of treatment were compared with those untreated bed rest periods. The potassium phosphate supplements prevented the hypercalciuria of bed rest, but fecal calcium tended to increase. The exercise program did not diminish the negative calcium balance. Neither treatment affected the heavy loss of mineral from the calcaneus. Several additional studies are developed to examine the problem further
Recommended from our members
The surface temperatures of Earth: steps towards integrated understanding of variability and change
Surface temperature is a key aspect of weather and climate, but the term may refer to different quantities that play interconnected roles and are observed by different means. In a community-based activity in June 2012, the EarthTemp Network brought together 55 researchers from five continents to improve the interaction between scientific communities who focus on surface temperature in particular domains, to exploit the strengths of different observing systems and to better meet the needs of different communities. The workshop identified key needs for progress towards meeting scientific and societal requirements for surface temperature understanding and information, which are presented in this community paper. A "whole-Earth" perspective is required with more integrated, collaborative approaches to observing and understanding Earth's various surface temperatures. It is necessary to build understanding of the relationships between different surface temperatures, where presently inadequate, and undertake large-scale systematic intercomparisons. Datasets need to be easier to obtain and exploit for a wide constituency of users, with the differences and complementarities communicated in readily understood terms, and realistic and consistent uncertainty information provided. Steps were also recommended to curate and make available data that are presently inaccessible, develop new observing systems and build capacities to accelerate progress in the accuracy and usability of surface temperature datasets
The Atmospheric Infrared Sounder Version 6 Cloud Products
The version 6 cloud products of the Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) and Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit (AMSU) instrument suite are described. The cloud top temperature, pressure, and height and effective cloud fraction are now reported at the AIRS field-of-view (FOV) resolution. Significant improvements in cloud height assignment over version 5 are shown with FOV-scale comparisons to cloud vertical structure observed by the CloudSat 94 GHz radar and the Cloud-Aerosol LIdar with Orthogonal Polarization (CALIOP). Cloud thermodynamic phase (ice, liquid, and unknown phase), ice cloud effective diameter D(sub e), and ice cloud optical thickness () are derived using an optimal estimation methodology for AIRS FOVs, and global distributions for 2007 are presented. The largest values of tau are found in the storm tracks and near convection in the tropics, while D(sub e) is largest on the equatorial side of the midlatitude storm tracks in both hemispheres, and lowest in tropical thin cirrus and the winter polar atmosphere. Over the Maritime Continent the diurnal variability of tau is significantly larger than for the total cloud fraction, ice cloud frequency, and D(sub e), and is anchored to the island archipelago morphology. Important differences are described between northern and southern hemispheric midlatitude cyclones using storm center composites. The infrared-based cloud retrievals of AIRS provide unique, decadal-scale and global observations of clouds over portions of the diurnal and annual cycles, and capture variability within the mesoscale and synoptic scales at all latitudes
High spatial resolution imaging of methane and other trace gases with the airborne Hyperspectral Thermal Emission Spectrometer (HyTES)
Currently large uncertainties exist associated with the
attribution and quantification of fugitive emissions of criteria pollutants
and greenhouse gases such as methane across large regions and key economic
sectors. In this study, data from the airborne Hyperspectral Thermal
Emission Spectrometer (HyTES) have been used to develop robust and reliable
techniques for the detection and wide-area mapping of emission plumes of
methane and other atmospheric trace gas species over challenging and diverse
environmental conditions with high spatial resolution that permits direct
attribution to sources. HyTES is a pushbroom imaging spectrometer with high
spectral resolution (256 bands from 7.5 to 12 µm), wide swath (1–2 km),
and high spatial resolution (∼ 2 m at 1 km altitude) that
incorporates new thermal infrared (TIR) remote sensing technologies. In this
study we introduce a hybrid clutter matched filter (CMF) and plume dilation
algorithm applied to HyTES observations to efficiently detect and
characterize the spatial structures of individual plumes of CH4,
H2S, NH3, NO2, and SO2 emitters. The sensitivity and
field of regard of HyTES allows rapid and frequent airborne surveys of large
areas including facilities not readily accessible from the surface. The
HyTES CMF algorithm produces plume intensity images of methane and other
gases from strong emission sources. The combination of high spatial
resolution and multi-species imaging capability provides source attribution
in complex environments. The CMF-based detection of strong emission sources
over large areas is a fast and powerful tool needed to focus on more
computationally intensive retrieval algorithms to quantify emissions with
error estimates, and is useful for expediting mitigation efforts and
addressing critical science questions
- …