Unlocking Learning: International Perspectives on Education in Prison: Brandeis Series in Law and Society
Editat de Justin McDevitt, Mneesha Gellmanen Limba Engleză Paperback – 18 ian 2024
Countries around the world have disparate experiences with education in prison. For decades, the United States has been locked in a pattern of exceptionally high mass incarceration. Though education has proven to be an impactful intervention, its role and the level of support it receives vary widely. As a result, effective opportunities for incarcerated people to reroute their lives during and after incarceration remain diffuse and inefficient. This volume highlights unique contributions from the field of education in prison globally. In this volume, academics and practitioners highlight new approaches and interesting findings from carceral interventions across twelve countries. From a college degree-granting program in Mexico to educational best practices in Norway and Belgium that support successful reentry, innovations in education are being developed in prison spaces around the world. As contributors from many countries share their insights about providing effective educational programs to incarcerated people, the United States can learn from the models and struggles beyond its borders.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781684581924
ISBN-10: 1684581923
Pagini: 307
Ilustrații: 10 halftones, 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brandeis University Press
Colecția Brandeis University Press
Seria Brandeis Series in Law and Society
ISBN-10: 1684581923
Pagini: 307
Ilustrații: 10 halftones, 2 tables
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 33 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Brandeis University Press
Colecția Brandeis University Press
Seria Brandeis Series in Law and Society
Notă biografică
Justin McDevitt is the director of the Women’s College Partnership, a collaboration between the Notre Dame Programs for Education in Prison at the University of Notre Dame, Marian University, and the Bard Prison Initiative. He also served as assistant director for alumni affairs and reentry for the Moreau College Initiative, an NDPEP program run in partnership with Holy Cross College. He is the cofounder and executive director of Life Outside, a not-for-profit reentry organization based in South Bend, Indiana. Mneesha Gellman is the founder and director of the Emerson Prison Initiative, which brings an Emerson College bachelor’s degree pathway to incarcerated students at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Concord. Gellman is an associate professor of political science at the Marlboro Institute for Liberal Arts and Interdisciplinary Studies at Emerson College.
Cuprins
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Justin Watson
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What We Can Learn from Education in Prison in Comparative Context
Mneesha Gellman and Justin McDevitt
PART I: CONTEXTUALIZING EDUCATION IN PRISON
1: The Long History of College-in-Prison
Max Kenner
2: The Work of Restoration: How to Educate When Education Fails
Maria K. McKenna
PART II: INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING AND LEARNING BEHIND THE WALL
3: College Now!: A Public University Goes behind the Wall in Mexico City
Natasha Bidault Mniszek
4: Education and Training in Austrian Prisons: Essential Pieces in the Reintegration Puzzle
Walter Hammerschick
5: Learning behind Bars: Education and Reintegration in Dutch Prisons
Chester Lee
6: Evaluating Education in Norwegian Prisons: Research-Based Approaches
Lise Øen Jones, Torfinn Langelid, Terje Manger, Paal Breivik, and Arve Asbjørnsen
7: Who Benefits Most from Correctional Education? A View from Slovakia
Silvia Lukácová, Dominika Temiaková, and Marek Lukác
8: Preparing for Release: Academic and Vocational Education for Incarcerated Persons in Polish Executive Criminal Law
Grzegorz A. Skrobotowicz
PART III: CHALLENGING THE SILENCING OF MARGINALIZED VOICES
9: Authorship in Prison: Stories of Identity, Resilience, and Renewal from El Salvador
Jennifer Coreas
10: Rethinking Education and Mediation for Incarcerated Immigrants in Italy
Maria Garro, Massimiliano Schirinzi, Gioacchino Lavanco, and Michelangelo Capitano
11: Effectiveness of Peer Learning and Peer Support in Prison: An International Realist Review of Outcomes, Mechanisms, and Contextual Factors
Dorien Brosens, Silke Marynissen, and Liesbeth De Donder
Conclusion: Drawing Lessons from Comparative Education in Prison
Justin McDevitt and Mneesha Gellman
Contributors
Index
Foreword
Justin Watson
Acknowledgments
Introduction: What We Can Learn from Education in Prison in Comparative Context
Mneesha Gellman and Justin McDevitt
PART I: CONTEXTUALIZING EDUCATION IN PRISON
1: The Long History of College-in-Prison
Max Kenner
2: The Work of Restoration: How to Educate When Education Fails
Maria K. McKenna
PART II: INNOVATIONS IN TEACHING AND LEARNING BEHIND THE WALL
3: College Now!: A Public University Goes behind the Wall in Mexico City
Natasha Bidault Mniszek
4: Education and Training in Austrian Prisons: Essential Pieces in the Reintegration Puzzle
Walter Hammerschick
5: Learning behind Bars: Education and Reintegration in Dutch Prisons
Chester Lee
6: Evaluating Education in Norwegian Prisons: Research-Based Approaches
Lise Øen Jones, Torfinn Langelid, Terje Manger, Paal Breivik, and Arve Asbjørnsen
7: Who Benefits Most from Correctional Education? A View from Slovakia
Silvia Lukácová, Dominika Temiaková, and Marek Lukác
8: Preparing for Release: Academic and Vocational Education for Incarcerated Persons in Polish Executive Criminal Law
Grzegorz A. Skrobotowicz
PART III: CHALLENGING THE SILENCING OF MARGINALIZED VOICES
9: Authorship in Prison: Stories of Identity, Resilience, and Renewal from El Salvador
Jennifer Coreas
10: Rethinking Education and Mediation for Incarcerated Immigrants in Italy
Maria Garro, Massimiliano Schirinzi, Gioacchino Lavanco, and Michelangelo Capitano
11: Effectiveness of Peer Learning and Peer Support in Prison: An International Realist Review of Outcomes, Mechanisms, and Contextual Factors
Dorien Brosens, Silke Marynissen, and Liesbeth De Donder
Conclusion: Drawing Lessons from Comparative Education in Prison
Justin McDevitt and Mneesha Gellman
Contributors
Index
Recenzii
“A thoughtful, thorough, and well-organized look into education in prison. (The Editors) have covered a substantial amount of ground so that whether the reader is well-versed in higher education, criminal justice, criminology, sociology, or not, they can open the book, which begins at the inception of education in prison, and learn about the evolution and practical challenges, constraints and success of education globally. This piece provides an incredibly important and insightful look into education in prison and leaves the reader with much to contemplate and a critical lens into considering what’s next for the fields of both education and criminology.”
“An essential practical, theoretical and evidence-informed resource about the question of education in prison. This book offers hope to those jurisdictions mired in high rates of incarceration or challenging environments in prison that other visions for both education and other models of the penal system are not only possible, but already exist.”
“This important volume brings a much-needed international perspective to the study and practice of higher education in prisons. Practitioners will find a wealth of information to validate, inform, and inspire their own work here, but it is often what goes unsaid or is assumed in the countries represented in this volume that shows us glimpses of the possible—what education in prison can and
should be.”
should be.”