What are our prisons for, punishment, containment, rehabilitation? And why is the public particularly sensitive about how people in prison spend their time? With the help of Professor Rosalind Crone (Open University), Paula Harriott (CEO Unlock), and a range of artists and prison experts, we dig into foundational questions for arts and criminal justice, attending to how histories of incarceration inform our prison system today and considering different roles arts practices might take on in this context: to humanise, heal, or cost effectively rehabilitate people.
Host Dr Sarah BartleyCo-host Shona BabyemiProducer Debbie KilbrideExecutive Producer Sukey Firth Sound Engineer Max Aspen Original music composed by Rex HoranVisual design Russell Miller
Thanks go to staff at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, particularly Laura Wardle, Phil Rowe, Samuel Bailey, Bryce Lease, Amy Ryall, and Izzy Stuart.
Stages of Justice was funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, with additional support from Royal Central School of Speech and Drama.
Show more...