Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W278531360> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 82 of
82
with 100 items per page.
- W278531360 endingPage "135" @default.
- W278531360 startingPage "118" @default.
- W278531360 abstract "Introduction OCCASIONALLY A DEATH IN CUSTODY OCCURS THAT IS EMBLEMATIC, REFLECTING and illustrating the complacency of processes and practices institutionalized over time. Such cases engage a media generally unsympathetic to prisoners and capture the empathy of a public usually demanding ever more punitive regimes. When Annie Kelly died in a strip cell in the punishment block of the Mourne House Women's Unit at Northern Ireland's high-security Maghaberry Prison, many people with whom she had contact during her short life expressed sorrow fused with frustration. (1) Typical responses were: I had known Annie as a child. She was bright, lively, and headstrong. She didn't tolerate fools gladly, but she was always in conflict with authority. Mostly it was justified. There was a terrible inevitability about her death. She was on a downward spiral and there seemed to be no appropriate support that responded to her needs. Prison was the last place she should have been (Social Worker, interview, July 2005). When I heard of her death I wasn't surprised, but I was devastated. I felt her loss personally because I was close to her and saw this young, intelligent woman suffer from a lack of proper mental health care. She was always going to end up back in prison and that was the worst place for her. Once she was diagnosed as personality disordered, they treated her as if she was bad, as if she was a manipulator. She wasn't like that. Whatever the diagnoses, I know from working with her that she had serious mental health problems that were getting worse. They couldn't handle that in a prison. They just reacted hard on her and she came back at them just as heavy (Social Worker, interview, October 2005). Annie Kelly, the tenth in a family of 12 children, first came into conflict with the law when she was 13. (2) Her family noted a significant change in her behavior following the tragic death of her brother. A year later, she received her first conviction. After being held in a Training School, she was sent to a Juvenile Justice Centre where, in July 1997, she was served with a Certificate of Unruliness. She was imprisoned in the Mourne House Women's Unit. Considered to have behavior problems too difficult to manage in a juvenile facility, this 15-year-old child was fast-tracked to a high-security women's prison. (3) Holding her in an adult prison breached international standards, not least the U.N. Convention on the Rights of the Child. From 1997 until September 2002, she was committed to prison on 28 occasions. She presented the Prison Service, and those with whom she had daily contact, with a formidable challenge. Her convictions reflected a range of offenses, including police assault, riotous and disorderly behavior, criminal damage, theft, and common assault. A teacher who worked with her in prison recalls Annie's arrival in Mourne House: Nobody knew how to handle her. What happened was dreadful. She responded to the more aggressive staff by hitting out. She was held most of the time in solitary confinement. When I taught her, our chairs were bolted to the ground (Interview, March 2004). Yet the teacher and her colleagues never felt threatened by Annie. Throughout her time in Mourne House, Annie was admitted to the male prison hospital on numerous occasions. Often agitated and disturbed, she said she heard voices. She also harmed herself by lacerating her arms, banging her head, inserting metal objects under her skin, and strangling herself with ligatures, losing consciousness. In and out of prison from 1997 to 2002, the records show numerous assaults on staff and cell wreckings, as well as 40 incidents of self-harm. Her formal psychiatric assessment found no organic impairment or mental illness. She was diagnosed as having attitudinal problems derived in a personality disorder. The diagnosis was offered as an explanation for her antagonistic behavior toward staff, her self-harm, and her suicidal ideation. …" @default.
- W278531360 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W278531360 creator A5016462640 @default.
- W278531360 date "2006-12-22" @default.
- W278531360 modified "2023-10-07" @default.
- W278531360 title "'They’d all love me dead …’: The Investigation, Inquest and Implications of the Death of Annie Kelly" @default.
- W278531360 cites W1539527968 @default.
- W278531360 cites W1984653663 @default.
- W278531360 cites W431692657 @default.
- W278531360 hasPublicationYear "2006" @default.
- W278531360 type Work @default.
- W278531360 sameAs 278531360 @default.
- W278531360 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W278531360 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W278531360 hasAuthorship W278531360A5016462640 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C108608090 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C11171543 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C17744445 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C199539241 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C27206212 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2776716606 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2778459489 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2778980041 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2778983918 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2779295839 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2780476252 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C2780656516 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C73484699 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C77805123 @default.
- W278531360 hasConcept C83645499 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C108608090 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C11171543 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C138885662 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C144024400 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C15744967 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C17744445 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C199539241 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C27206212 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2776716606 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2778459489 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2778980041 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2778983918 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2779295839 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2780476252 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C2780656516 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C73484699 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C77805123 @default.
- W278531360 hasConceptScore W278531360C83645499 @default.
- W278531360 hasIssue "4" @default.
- W278531360 hasLocation W2785313601 @default.
- W278531360 hasOpenAccess W278531360 @default.
- W278531360 hasPrimaryLocation W2785313601 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W1985399129 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W1999038658 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2022368975 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2061131839 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2079814124 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2116959723 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2124497995 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W235535732 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2480495813 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2486170611 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2584623466 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W258887760 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2772547139 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2782592764 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W291242260 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W3049358035 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W3124999142 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W3144342983 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W3147632621 @default.
- W278531360 hasRelatedWork W2273823593 @default.
- W278531360 hasVolume "33" @default.
- W278531360 isParatext "false" @default.
- W278531360 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W278531360 magId "278531360" @default.
- W278531360 workType "article" @default.