English Local Prisons, 1860-1900: Next Only to DeathThe local prisons of the latter half of the nineteenth century refined systems of punishment so harsh that one judge considered the maximum penalty of two years local imprisonment to be the most severe punishment known to English law: "next only to death". This work examines how private perceptions and concerns became public policy. It also traces the move in English government from the rural and aristocratic to the urban and more democratic. It follows the rise of the powerful elite of the higher civil service, describes some of the forces that attempted to oppose it, and provides a window through which to view the process of state formation. |
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Page 9
... nationalization of the local prisons , and swallow uncritically the findings of the Carnarvon Committee about the lack of uniformity in gaol policy and administration , and the malign consequences thereof . Nor are they loath to cite ...
... nationalization of the local prisons , and swallow uncritically the findings of the Carnarvon Committee about the lack of uniformity in gaol policy and administration , and the malign consequences thereof . Nor are they loath to cite ...
Page 10
Next Only to Death Sean McConville, Professor Sean Mcconville. benefits of nationalization outweigh the costs ? Was that body , the undertaker of the " Du Cane regime " - the Gladstone Committee correct when it said of nationalization ...
Next Only to Death Sean McConville, Professor Sean Mcconville. benefits of nationalization outweigh the costs ? Was that body , the undertaker of the " Du Cane regime " - the Gladstone Committee correct when it said of nationalization ...
Page 61
... nationalization of the local prisons he played a part in representing magisterial interests to the Home Office . Published several pamphlets on penal policy ( A Century of Experiments on Secondary Punishments : A Lecture Delivered at ...
... nationalization of the local prisons he played a part in representing magisterial interests to the Home Office . Published several pamphlets on penal policy ( A Century of Experiments on Secondary Punishments : A Lecture Delivered at ...
Page 111
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Page 143
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Contents
21 | |
64 | |
CARNARVON AND NATIONAL PENAL POLICY | 97 |
THE SOCIAL AND PENAL IDEAS OF SIR EDMUND | 149 |
THE FLAWED PROSPECTUS | 188 |
Discipline labour and instruction | 235 |
Health dietary and discharge arrangements | 282 |
Special categories | 335 |
THE JUSTICES REACT TO NATIONALIZATION | 432 |
THE COMMITTEES ATTEMPT TO ORGANIZE | 481 |
TRIUMPH OF THE CLERKS | 509 |
THE CALL FOR A PRISON INQUIRY | 549 |
PERSONALITIES AND PREOCCUPATIONS | 585 |
COMPOUNDING ERRORS | 615 |
AFTERMATH | 649 |
THE FINAL ACT | 697 |
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Common terms and phrases
administration agreed allowed appointed asked Association authority Bill Cane Cane's Carnarvon cells civil Commission Commissioners committed Conference considerable considered continued convict course court crime criminal criticisms Crofton Daily dietary directed discharged discipline Du Cane duties effect evidence execution experience gaol give given Gladstone Committee governor hard labour Home Office Home Secretary House Ibid imprisonment increase inquiry Inspectors interest issues John justices labour less letter London Lord magistrates March matter Minutes months necessary noted object observed offenders penal persons political possible powers practical present prison proposed punishment question reading reason received recommendations reference reform reformatory Report responsibility Royal rules sentence separate Sessions social societies staff suggested taken took various Vict Viscount Gladstone visiting committee warders