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Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill: Penal Reformer

Foreword by Sir Martin Gilbert

by Alan Baxendale (Author)
©2010 Monographs XIV, 231 Pages

Summary

Historians of Winston Churchill’s career customarily mention his innovations, whether realized or not, in prison treatment and sentencing during his Home Secretaryship between February 1910 and October 1911. Little mention is made, however, of what motivated him. This book traces the evolution of Churchill’s thinking as it has survived in the documentary records of his Home Secretaryship held in the Home Office archive, together with other evidence, both primary and secondary.
This evidence incorporates the exchange of views concerning specific prison treatment and sentencing issues in which Churchill engaged with his senior Home Office staff and His Majesty’s Prison Commissioners in the course of their day-to-day transaction of the business of criminal justice. These issues continue to be relevant, given the ongoing debate about modification of the criminal justice system, the internal organization and management of the Home Office as its overseer and more particularly prison treatment and sentencing.
The book also sheds light on Churchill as a person, a politician and a government minister by focusing on his working methods and his relationships with his staff, reminding us of a side to his character which is an important element in understanding his long parliamentary and ministerial career.

Details

Pages
XIV, 231
Year
2010
ISBN (PDF)
9783035300369
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0353-0036-9
Language
English
Publication date
2011 (January)
Keywords
Sociology Political history Social history Law
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2010. XIV, 231 pp.

Biographical notes

Alan Baxendale (Author)

The Author: Alan S. Baxendale received his B.A. from University College London in 1949 and qualified as a teacher at the London Institute of Education in 1950. He became the first professional educator to serve as Chief Education Officer to the Secretary of State at the Home Office. Prior to his retirement he was awarded an honorary M.A. by the Open University for his role in broadening prison education programmes through the medium of OU techniques. On his retirement in 1985 he was awarded an OBE. He received his M.Phil. from Queen Mary University of London in 2004.

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248 pages