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Prisons --- Crime prevention --- Criminology --- Juvenile Delinquency --- Crime prevention. --- Criminology. --- Prisons. --- Penologie. --- Gevangeniswezen. --- Criminaliteit. --- Preventie. --- periodicals. --- Howard League for Penal Reform --- Howard League for Penal Reform. --- England. --- Law --- Crime, Criminology and Law Enforcement --- Criminology and criminals --- Criminalité --- Periodicals. --- Periodicals --- Prévention --- Périodiques
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The Western world stereotypically associates Ottoman or 'Turkish' prisons with images of torture, narcotics and brutal sexual behaviour. Now, Kent F. Schull argues that these prisons were actually a site of immense reform and contestation during the 19th century. It was within these prisons' walls that many of the pressing questions of Ottoman modernity were worked out; questions of administrative centralisation, Islamic criminal law and punishment, gender and childhood, prisoner rehabilitation, bureaucracy, identity and social engineering. By juxtaposing them with the reality of prison life, Schull investigates how state-mandated reforms affected the lives of local prison officials and inmates. He shows how these individuals actively conformed to, contested and manipulated new penal policies and practices for their own benefit.
Prisons --- History --- Dungeons --- Gaols --- Penitentiaries --- Correctional institutions --- Imprisonment --- Prison-industrial complex --- Prisons - Turkey - History - 20th century --- Prisons - Turkey - History - 19th century --- civilisation --- penal reform --- Ottoman Empire --- Ottoman prisons --- Turkish prisons --- Middle East history --- defensive modernisation --- Istanbul --- Sharia
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This history of Bedford Prison is told through the story of the family of gaolers who ran it for many years and the contributions of five men closely associated with the prison.
To the account of John Bunyan's trial and imprisonment is added a chapter on others in the prison at the same time.
After John Howard discovered the appalling conditions in which prisoners were kept, his investigation into prison conditions went far beyond the county and led to his book 'The State of the Prisons' and his advocacy of penal reform. The meeting between John Howard and Jeremy Bentham is recounted in the latter's words. After the former's death, Samuel Whitbread II carried forward plans to build a new prison in Bedford. The Rev. Philip Hunt was rector of St Peter's Bedford and deeply involved in local affairs, including the prison and the house of correction. Lord John Russell, son of the 6th Duke of Bedford, was a politician and Home Secretary 1835-1839, during which period the national system of prison inspectors was set up.
The connections of family, friendship, religion and political alliance amongst these five men is drawn out.
There is also much about the prison itself, the buildings and their rebuilding; and the inmates, their lives and punishments including transportation. This is not merely an institutional history but much more a history of the people, outside and inside, who affected or were affected by the prison.
England --- HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / 20th Century. --- Bedford Prison. --- Bunyan (John). --- Howard (John) Hunt (Rev Philip). --- Richardson family (gaolers). --- Russell (Lord John) transportation. --- Whitbread (Samuel II). --- maps. --- nonconformity. --- pedigrees. --- penal reform. --- prisons. --- Bedford Prison --- History. --- EnglandxSocial conditions.
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