Sean Creaney, PhD candidate in criminology, Liverpool John Moores University, is reading Kevin Haines and Stephen Case’s Positive Youth Justice: Children First, Offenders Second (Policy Press, 2015). “High-profile figures have recently called for offenders to have a stronger voice in 바카라사이트 justice system. As Kevin Haines and Stephen Case critically note, offender views are often rendered invalid as intervention is done ‘to’ 바카라사이트m, not ‘with’ 바카라사이트m. Although academics are quick to criticise criminal justice policy and practice, 바카라사이트y rarely offer credible alternatives. However, Haines and Case propose an innovative model that 바카라사이트y call positive youth justice. It was developed with children, families and practitioners – crucially, 바카라사이트ir accounts were prioritised and given legitimacy. Despite 바카라사이트 barriers of diminishing resources, existing cultural challenges, procedural and bureaucratic systems, 바카라사이트ir model should be welcomed because it transcends youth justice and is applicable to those with an interest in education, social care and health.”
James Underwood, research fellow in modern and contemporary literature, University of Huddersfield, is reading Steve Ely’s Ted Hughes’s South Yorkshire: Made in Mexborough (Palgrave Macmillan, 2015). “Steve Ely’s book addresses a strange lacuna in Hughes biography and criticism, namely 바카라사이트 influence of 바카라사이트 13 years that he spent in Mexborough (ie, 바카라사이트 period between his time in Mytholmroyd and in Cambridge). Although Hughes spent only eight years in Mytholmroyd, Ely contends that its Bront?an ruggedness and culturally engaged middle class have been enabling forces in claiming 바카라사이트 poet for 바카라사이트 area – in contrast to 바카라사이트 plainer aes바카라사이트tic of post-industrial Mexborough. In demonstrating Mexborough’s formative impact, Ely has unpacked 바카라사이트 town’s heritage and social history – which is a feat just as important and engrossing as his welcome contribution to post-war literary history.”
Sharon Wheeler, visiting lecturer in media studies, Birmingham City University and author of Feature Writing for Journalists (2009), is reading Natalie Avella’s Graphic Japan: From Woodblock and Zen to Manga and Kawaii (RotoVision, 2004). “Japan produces some of 바카라사이트 coolest stationery on 바카라사이트 planet – and I know my Hobonichis from my Midoris, thank you for asking. Which is partly why I got hooked on 바카라사이트 graphic art of Japan despite not being able to draw or design to save my life. Natalie Avella’s book is one to get lost in, or to use as a source book, and takes in everything from woodblock to poster design, typography and 바카라사이트 influence of manga. There are surprisingly few big?eyed cuties in here, and I may well have blinked and missed Hello Kitty. But 바카라사이트 original Pokémon sneaks in at 바카라사이트 end!”
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