A Race to the bottom – Prison Education and the English and Welsh Policy Context


Autoria(s): Czerniawski, Gerry
Data(s)

08/07/2015

Resumo

This article examines prison education in England and Wales arguing that a disjuncture exists between the policy rhetoric of entitlement to education in prison at the European level and the playing out of that entitlement in English and Welsh prisons. Caught between conflicting discourses around a need to combat recidivism and a need for incarceration, prison education in England exists within a policy context informed, in part, by an international human rights agenda on the one hand and global recession, financial cutbacks, and a moral panic about crime on the other. The European Commission has highlighted a number of challenges facing prison education in Europe including over‐crowded institutions, increasing diversity in prison populations, the need to keep pace with pedagogical changes in mainstream education and the adoption of new technologies for learning (Hawley et al., 2013). These are challenges confronting all policy makers involved in prison education in England and Wales in a policy context that is messy, contradictory and fiercely contested. The article argues that this policy context, exacerbated by socio‐economic discourses around neo‐liberalism, is leading to a race‐to‐the‐bottom in the standards of educational provision for prisoners in England and Wales.

Formato

text

Identificador

http://roar.uel.ac.uk/4273/1/Gerry%20Czerniawski.pdf

Czerniawski, Gerry (2015) ‘A Race to the bottom – Prison Education and the English and Welsh Policy Context’, Journal of Education Policy.

Publicador

Taylor & Francis

Relação

http://roar.uel.ac.uk/4273/

Tipo

Article

PeerReviewed