We want to provide decent, safe and secure accommodation that supports individuals in their rehabilitation. We want to reduce levels of violence and self-harm and develop the evidence on what structures and interventions can help improve outcomes for individuals in prison.
We can be contacted at the following email address: evidence_partnerships@justice.gov.uk.
This question was published as part of the set of ARIs in this document:
Prisons are experiencing numerous problems: rising numbers, 'new' populations requiring specialised care (e.g. elderly men, military veterans); an ageing and dilapidated estate that spatially exacerbates effects of overc...
Funded by: ESRC
Lead research organisation: University of Bath
The project partially answers the question as it investigates the impact of interventions in prisons, but it does not specifically address how these interventions are sequenced alongside those in the community.
Matter Architecture is leading a project to develop a set of design tools for improving rehabilitation through the architecture of prison environments. Together with Space Works we are connecting evidence from the field ...
Funded by: Innovate UK
Lead research organisation: MATTER ARCHITECTURE LTD
The project partially answers the question as it focuses on improving rehabilitation through the architecture of prison environments, but it does not specifically address the sequencing of interventions in prisons and the community.
In May 2019, Dutch courts refused to deport an English suspected drug smuggler, citing the potential for inhuman and degrading treatment at HMP Liverpool. This well publicised judgment illustrates the necessity of my FLF...
Funded by: FLF
Lead research organisation: University of Nottingham
The project partially answers the question as it reconceptualizes prison regulation for safer societies, but it does not specifically address the sequencing of interventions in prisons and the community.