2020
DOI: 10.1386/ijcm_00008_1
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The pedagogy of a prison and community music programme: Spaces for conflict and safety

Abstract: Using theoretical concepts taken from the field of human geography to analyse the conflictual elements within music programmes, this paper presents new empirical research that unpacks the complex pedagogy employed by community musicians with the aim of beginning to address two recent criticisms of community music scholarship: a) community musicians only report positive outcomes and b) community musicians are not interested in scholarly analyses of their work.We begin with a review of literature presenting pos… Show more

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Cited by 23 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Throughout seven decades of ethnographic accounts, we see seasonal rituals used as a means of transporting the outside world in for the holidays and transforming the physical and metaphysical prison environment into something new. Existing third space scholarship on prisons opened an avenue to explore carceral spaces in a way which broke down the binaries of free/captive, inside/outside and keeper/kept (Crewe et al, 2014;Henley & Parks, 2020;Wilson, 2000Wilson, , 2003Wilson, , 2004. Using these and other theoretically-informed works provided a point of entry to examine Christmas in captivity and to broaden this corpus of work.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Throughout seven decades of ethnographic accounts, we see seasonal rituals used as a means of transporting the outside world in for the holidays and transforming the physical and metaphysical prison environment into something new. Existing third space scholarship on prisons opened an avenue to explore carceral spaces in a way which broke down the binaries of free/captive, inside/outside and keeper/kept (Crewe et al, 2014;Henley & Parks, 2020;Wilson, 2000Wilson, , 2003Wilson, , 2004. Using these and other theoretically-informed works provided a point of entry to examine Christmas in captivity and to broaden this corpus of work.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The literature on music-based rehabilitation programs that focused on therapeutic and educational interventions during incarceration shows improvement in FIIs’ wellbeing ( Bilby et al, 2013 ; Brewster, 2010 ; Cohen, 2007 ; De Viggiani et al, 2010 ; Harbert, 2010 ; Kougiali et al, 2018 ; Tuastad & O’Grady, 2013 ; Winder et al, 2015 ). Such studies were done in European countries such as the UK ( Doxat-Pratt, 2021 ; Henley & Parks, 2020 ; Henley et al, 2012 ; Kyprianides & Easterbrook, 2020 ), the Netherlands ( Hakvoort, 2002 ; Macfarlane et al, 2019 ), Norway ( Gold et al, 2014 ; Gold et al, 2021 ; Hjørnevik & Waage, 2019 ; Tuastad & O’Grady, 2013 ), and other countries such as the US ( Cohen, 2012 ), Australia ( Tuastad & O’Grady, 2013 ), China ( Chen et al, 2014 ), and Israel ( Bensimon et al, 2015 ; Ze’evi et al, 2022 ). However, research on music-based rehabilitation programs after the release from prison is scarce ( Bensimon, 2023 ; Bensimon & Gilboa, 2010 ; Tuastad & O’Grady, 2013 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Urie et al (2019) suggest that hospitality 'interrupts ourselves and disrupts our social settings' (2019: 80), a disruption that is necessary for participants in the sessions to imagine something different. This recognition of music making in prisons being 'disruptive' or 'challenging' is important as Henley and Parks (forthcoming 2020) suggests that much research on community music in prisons has a history of 'over positivity' due to the evaluation culture of arts in prisons programmes; a culture that is engrained within the 'what works' agenda of criminal justice.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%