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Citizen convicts

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The first comprehensive study of prisoners and the right to vote
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  • 20 July 2017
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Prisoner enfranchisement remains one of the few contested electoral issues in twenty-first-century democracies. It is at the intersection of punishment and representative government. Many jurisdictions remain divided on whether or not prisoners should be allowed access to the franchise. This book investigates the experience of prisoner enfranchisement in the Republic of Ireland. It examines the issue in a comparative context, beginning by locating prisoner enfranchisement in a theoretical framework, exploring the arguments for and against allowing prisoners to vote. Drawing on global developments in jurisprudence and penal policy, it examines the background to, and wider significance of, this change in the law. Using the Irish experience to examine the issue in a wider context, this book argues that the legal position concerning the voting rights of the imprisoned reveals wider historical, political and social influences in the treatment of those confined in penal institutions.
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Price: £30.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Publication Date: 20 July 2017
ISBN: 9781526116970
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Criminology, Offenders, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Society and culture: general, Elections and referenda / suffrage

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Cormac Behan is Lecturer in Criminology at the University of Sheffield

Introduction
1. Citizenship by civic virtue?
2. Prisoners and the politics of enfranchisement
3. Political change, penal continuity and prisoner enfranchisement
4. Voting and political engagement
5. Prisoners’ perspectives on politics
6. Imprisonment, civic engagement and community participation
7. Citizen or convict?
Bibliography
Index