Our Autumn Winter 2022 edition is packed with news views and trues by women in the justice system.
Someone’s Daughter – More portraits by leading photographers of women in the justice system from our campaign, which launched at Photo London in September 2021.
The Right to be Forgotten by Joy Martin. How does the Google Effect play on the lives of people with convictions and what can they do to be able to live their lives free from the trauma and long shadows of their past convictions?
When Probation gets it Wrong – The lack of mental health training for probation staff can have dire consequences for people being managed on license in the community. Sue Wheatcroft tells The View about her experience in an article written for The Probation Journal, which was later censored and removed. How are organizations meant to learn when they thrive off a culture of denial and abuse?
Prison Policy White Paper – The government finally published its Prison White Paper. Lucy Rowland breaks it down and extracts the questions that need answers in a manageable and comprehensible way.
Justice Layercake – Farah Damji and Jonathan Cole interview Imran Mahmood on the law, racism, the judiciary and his silo-busting novel You Don’t Know Me, recently televised on BBC1.
Stiletto Feminism – International artist Jo Cope on how art and fashion can change the world.
Greenwashing the Effects of the Prison Industrial Complex – Lily Guenault writes about how the Government is misusing green economics and misrepresenting environmental sustainability to make a deeply flawed argument for bolstering the prison industrial complex in its Prison building program.
Sexy but Psycho by Dr. Jessica Taylor – A sneak peek at our favorite trauma-informed practitioner’s long-awaited new book.
Farah Nazir, CEO of Women’s Aid on how we must do better to make refuge accommodation more widely available and her vision to make domestic abuse unacceptable.
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