British Journal of Criminology Advance Access originally published online on April 24, 2007
British Journal of Criminology 2007 47(5):798-816; doi:10.1093/bjc/azm012
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The British Journal of Criminology 47:798-816 (2007)
© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies (ISTD). All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org
Risk and Human Rights in UK Prison Governance
* School of Law, University of Nottingham, Nottingham NG7 2RD; therese.murphy{at}nottingham.ac.uk; noel.whitty{at}nottingham.ac.uk.
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Risk and human rights discourses dominate the landscape of prison governance in the United Kingdom. For the most part, however, criminologists have focused only on concepts of risk and lawyers on human rights; there has been little overlap in the scholarship of these disciplines. In this article, we problematize this separation. We argue for a new stream of academic enquiry which recognizes the co-existence of different types of risk and rights discourses, and which draws upon more interdisciplinary understandings of risk, human rights and regulation.
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