The Inner Temple Social Context of the Law Lecture by The Rev’d Jonathan Aitken and Chris Daw QC. Moderated by Libby Purves OBE, 2 February 2021.
Education
- Our vision for the future
- Call to the Bar
- Master H Meets...Again
- International Practice Panel
- Race and the Legal Profession
- Forensic Document Examination - The Science Today
- The Bar of Ireland, Brexit and the Common Law
- The History of the Law Officers
- Memory as Evidence
- The Absolute Ban on Assisted Dying and Lessons from Canada
- Brain Imaging as Evidence
- Previous Lecture Series and Speakers
- Proof in International Criminal Trials
- Forensic Identification from the Hand
- Giving Judges a Voice in Democracies
- A Public Health Approach to Equality Law
- The Predicament and Agency of Refugees
- The Wild and Ridiculous Doctrine of Equality
- What Does It Mean to Be Anti-Racist in a Profession Full of Privileged People?
- The Limits of Fiduciary Rules
- 'Sales' on Retention of Title Terms
- Show me the money!
- Special Gandhi Lecture
- Temple Women's Forum: Planned Breaks and Return to the Bar
- Frequently asked questions
Home › Education › Education Resources › The Social Context of the Law Lecture Series › Prison Reform
Prison Reform
The Social Context of the Law
Prison Reform
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Further Reading
A Bit of a Stretch: The Diaries of a Prisoner Chris Atkins (2020)
Justice on Trial: Radical Solutions for a System at Breaking Point Chris Daw (2020)
Sins of Fathers: A Spectacular Break from a Criminal, Dark Past Michael Emmett with Harriet Compston (2021)
Justice and Penal Reform: Re-shaping the Penal Landscape Stephen Farrall (Editor) (2016)
Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison (Penguin Modern Classics) Michel Foucault (1975)
Shades of the Prison House: A History of Incarceration in the British Isles Harry Potter (2019)
Pain and Retribution: A Short History of British Prisons, 1066 to the Present by David Wilson (2014)