48 research outputs found
Captive in cycles of invisibility? Prisoners' work for the private sector
This article critiques a case of modern prison-labour by exploring prisoners’ attitudes towards the prison-work they undertake while incarcerated. The study is based at a privatised male prison in the UK, assigned the pseudonym ‘Bridgeville’. Bridgeville contracts with private-sector firms in providing market-focused prison-work – so-called real work – for inmates in some of its workshops. In exploring prisoners’ perceptions of this privatised prison-work, it is found that it mainly comprises mundane, low-skilled activities typical of informalised, poor-quality jobs that are socially, legally and economically devalued and categorised as forms of ‘invisible work’. At Bridgeville, such privatised prison-work largely fails in engaging or upskilling inmates, leaving them pessimistic about its value as preparation for employment post-release. Its rehabilitative credentials are therefore questioned. The article contributes to the debate around invisible work more generally by problematising this example of excluded work and the cycle of disadvantage that underpins it
International consensus on sleep problems in pediatric palliative care: paving the way
International audienc
Universities' targets for research time are way off the mark
A year-long experiment convinced Michael Marinetto that carving out research time is a fun but unwinnable gam
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Social theory, the state and modern society ::the state in contemporary social thought /
Universities should not swat the public intellectual gadfly
Alongside the academic edutainer and the policy expert, there should be room for the voice from the wilderness, says Michael Marinett
Academic life: don’t paint it black
A university career can be lonely, anxious and narrow. But those who learn from their regrets can avoid unnecessary stress
