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Academic literature on the topic 'Espace pénitentiaire'
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Journal articles on the topic "Espace pénitentiaire"
Chantraine, Gilles, David Scheer, and Olivier Milhaud. "Espace et surveillances en établissement pénitentiaire pour mineurs." Politix 97, no. 1 (2012): 125. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/pox.097.0125.
Full textSilva Junior, Dinaldo, and Stéphane Granger. "Enseigner en prision." História Revista 25, no. 3 (December 28, 2020): 133–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.5216/hr.v25i3.66228.
Full textBorgeaud-Garciandía, Natacha. "Des auxiliaires de puériculture en prison." Sciences & Actions Sociales N° 20, no. 2 (February 1, 2024): 154–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/sas.020.0012.
Full textBracq-Leca, Herminie, and Marie-Anouck Pitel-Buttez. "Construire et proposer un espace-temps de soin dans un établissement pénitentiaire pour mineurs." Adolescence 82, no. 4 (2012): 869. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/ado.082.0869.
Full textWinslow, Donna. "La question foncière en Nouvelle-Calédonie." ARTICLES 12, no. 1 (September 22, 2021): 25–37. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1081563ar.
Full textThomas, Jérôme, and Paloma Contreras-Pulido. "Le contrat de communication des radios pénitentiaires en France et en Espagne." Recherches en Communication 55 (January 2, 2024): 193–214. https://doi.org/10.14428/rec.v55i55.76103.
Full textPicot-Ngo, Clément, Joëlle Kivits, and Karine Chevreul. "Réduire le tabagisme dans les prisons : éléments théoriques et méthodologiques nécessaires à la co-construction d’une intervention en contexte pénitentiaire." Global Health Promotion 28, no. 1_suppl (March 2021): 8–14. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1757975921993434.
Full textCid Moliné, José. "Le système pénitentiaire en Espagne." Revue française d'administration publique 99, no. 1 (2001): 501–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rfap.2001.3614.
Full textde Dardel, Julie. "Les prisons peuvent-elles trouver le Nord ? Le modèle scandinave, boussole de la décroissance carcérale." Parlement[s], Revue d'histoire politique N° 36, no. 2 (June 13, 2022): 99–112. http://dx.doi.org/10.3917/parl2.036.0099.
Full textChevance, Justine, Marion Perrot, Antoine Bioy, and Khadija Chahraoui. "Présence et évasion : l’hypnothérapie en milieu carcéral." Perspectives Psy 62, no. 2 (April 2023): 171–77. http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/ppsy/2023622171.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Espace pénitentiaire"
Maret, Adrien. "« On ne mord pas la main qui nous nourrit » ? Action associative et politique partenariale de la direction de l'administration pénitentiaire." Electronic Thesis or Diss., université Paris-Saclay, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024UPASU011.
Full textTo examine the conditions under which associations (nonprofit organizations) operate in the French prison system, and the ways in which they cooperate with the prison administration, this research focuses on the main leaders and coordinators of association networks in the “prison-justice” field (Secours catholique, Croix-Rouge, Genepi...). Most of these associations are active in prison or after release, carrying out social actions in the broadest sense of the term (material aid, training workshops, health prevention, etc.) for adults who are or have been in prison or on probation. They have the distinctive feature of being mainly made up of teams of volunteers potentially backed up by salaried staff, and of regularly interacting with the Direction de l'administration pénitentiaire (DAP), the French Prison Administration Department.On the one hand, the relevance of this approach is to question associative participation in public action in the penitentiary sector (which includes prison and probation): in its capacity to bring new services and public problems to the fore, to ensure actions throughout the country, and to influence the functioning of the system and politico-administrative decisions. On the other hand, it enables us to analyze how the State regulates these activities carried out by the private nonprofit sector. Associative interventions, particularly in prisons, are recognized by legislation but are scarcely regulated beyond simple access authorizations. Institutionalization has been carried out in a non-harmonized way, resulting in associations continuing to face disparate administrative treatments and discretionary decisions. Finally, the DAP has created a partnership arena at the central level, providing a forum for negotiation and confrontation, feedback, and leverage to support the development of associative networks.This thesis shows that, through the partnership framework of the associative sector, the central State is not so much disengaging as reconfiguring its actions from a distance. Over the twentieth century, the prison administration has seen many of its social, educational and health-related prerogatives withdrawn in favor of other public services. Nevertheless, it reaffirms its desire to develop a more comprehensive approach to caring for people, even though it leaves or delegates many aspects to associations. Based on its redefined objectives, the DAP formalizes its relationships through partnership agreements, and supports associations while evaluating them based on indicators. From this point on, the associative sector represents an interface between the repressive and social roles of the State. Thus, it faces tensions between participation and denunciation, civic engagement and free labor, all within the framework of asymmetrical and controlled cooperation
Veaudor, Manon. "Les « frontières » de l’ordre carcéral : Affectation, négociation des identités et surveillance en maison d’arrêt." Thesis, université Paris-Saclay, 2020. http://www.theses.fr/2020UPASU001.
Full textAbstract: This thesis deals with the practices of assigning detainees inside short-term prisons. Our findings are based on an ethnographic survey in men’s prisons. We examine the ways in which order is produced through observing prison warders’ practices – ways in which prisoners are classified, categorized, assigned and monitored. The analysis takes also into account the observed practices from the inmates’ perspective. By combining the study of the modes of identifying inmates with how the detention sectors are organized, this study wants to show that space management also shapes individual “careers” within the institution.To this end, it analyses the ways in which the prison order is produced in relation to its external environment, and in particular the prisoners’ territories of origin. Three approaches are put to the test: one focuses on the study of the arrivals’ quarters; another one revolves around the assignment practices as they are implemented and perceived; the third one eventually looks at the implementation of prison intelligence. These entry points make it possible to grasp the way in which prison practices and categories filter, i.e. select, information on the external environment of the institution but also on the trajectory of prisoners. The reconfiguration of surveillance practices in the light of contemporary reforms of penal confinement will therefore be examined from this perspective. The material used in this study is the result of a nine-month ethnographic survey in two short-term prisons in different French regions. It combines the observation of professional practices in detention and the role of professionals in assignment commissions. It is also based on semi-directive interviews conducted with detainees, supervisory and management staff
Durand, Corentin. "Les reconfigurations de la relation carcérale : sociologie des espaces de communication entre prisonnier·e·s et autorités pénitentiaires." Thesis, Paris, EHESS, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019EHES0140.
Full textThis research focuses on one of the contemporary transformations in contemporary French prisons: the opening and renewal of communication spaces between prisoners and prison authorities. As a result of the introduction of new norms regulating prison life; the emergence of new actors to enforce them, the implementation of standardized procedures and the promotion of new security doctrines, the possibility for prisoners to express requests and engage in legal remedies has become part of prison formal functioning. To assess this evolution, this study investigates how these discourses shape everyday life in prisons, and in particular in their thematic, relational and argumentative aspects, but also how the formats of these communications between prisoners and prison authorities, and in particular in their technical, material and normative constraints, shape those discourses. This thesis is structured around four spaces of communication: the prison corridors where informal and daily communications between prisoners and supervisors take place, the requests written by prisoners to prison officials, the face-to-face audiences between a prisoner and an official and, finally, the disciplinary hearings where the institutional power to punish is put into play. By adopting a bottom-up perspective, the analysis of these spaces makes it possible to describe the hybrid economy of power relations in prison. To do this, this research is mainly based on an investigation in two French prisons. It combined ethnographic observation of the expression and handling of grievances, interviews with prisoners and professionals, and analysis of bodies of written or oral communications between prisoners and prison officers
Falxa, Joana. "Le droit disciplinaire pénitentiaire : une approche européenne. Analyse des systèmes anglais, gallois, espagnol et français à la lumière du droit européen des droits de l'homme." Thesis, Pau, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014PAUU2009.
Full textDiscipline is a key part of prison life which has long been ignored by the law. The comparative analysis of the English, Welsh, Spanish and French systems on this topic highlights however the prison discipline’s normativization and the increase of all the procedural safeguards for prisoners-litigants. This process reflects the search for a greater equity in prison adjudication, which could be connected to the progressive strengthening of Human Rights’ in prison. Although the European law on Human Rights is still timorous on some procedural aspects, it is part of this evolution, and it develops a global prison ideology by setting common standards for the different national laws in Europe. Nevertheless, the review of the different disciplinary systems enlightens the difficulties faced by the emergence of the rule of law in prison. Besides, the law is far from being the only mean for prison management. These factors’ convergence encourages to propose a new global disciplinary model, reflecting the search of a higher level of equity in the prison disciplinary system
Montmagny, Grenier Catherine. "Sexe, drogue et quête de sens : leçon d'économie politique d'une liminalité en contexte touristique costaricain." Thesis, 2020. http://hdl.handle.net/1866/25235.
Full textWithin the field of criminology, the ecological perspective argues for an implicit notion of spatiality, one which reduces the physical environment to nothing more than a basic geographical site, thereby excluding the power relationships, as well as the social and cultural dynamics, or values- and meaning-based dynamics, conveyed therein. As such, this study investigates the importance of geographical space in criminology. By employing the concept of liminality, defined as a symbolic space-time, this thesis also specifically studies the role space plays in the (re)production of both illegalisms and playful deviance, their respective regulation, as well as in the production of knowledge. In order to shed light on the liminality concept, this thesis draws on a five-and-a-half-month-long ethnography, carried out in two Costa Rican beach towns. It also illustrates how the tourism industry’s neoliberal practices produce a liminal space that caters to quests for the exoticism, and especially the hedonism and authenticity, sought by tourists seeking to escape the confines of their everyday lives. While a segment of the scientific literature views liminality as a space where everyday norms are suspended, this thesis instead suggests that tourists adhere to norms already present in such spaces, ones specifically based on an aggressive form of hedonism, which in turn result in “out of the ordinary” alcohol and drug consumption, as well as sexuality, on the part of tourists. In adopting an interdisciplinary approach, this study initially employs cultural geography’s notion of space. This conception of space, which employs an idealist-materialist dialectic, also allows for the adoption of an analytical perspective based on the concept of uneven development. It also makes it possible to understand not only why certain places, regions, and countries are recognized as being so-called liminal spaces, but also how the practices of a capitalist economy push them to rely on an image of liminality in order to survive and operate within the market economy. In additionally taking inspiration from social anthropology, this thesis views the touristic experience as a rite of passage, while also proposing that tourists are subjected to a symbolic device, which leads them to perform a site-specific tourist identity. This performance, given concrete form by the consumption of transgressions, results in the (re)production of the liminal space. The thesis also shows that this symbolic device is a regulating mechanism in regard to conducts, but additionally to bodies. Lastly, the thesis illustrates the ways in which the research field is also a liminality for researchers, one which affects them, as well as the knowledge produced therein.