top of page
Susy Menis

A History of Women’s Prisons in England: The Myth of Prisoner Reformation

(Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2021).


This book presents a revisionist prison history which brings to the forefront the relationship between gender and policy. It examines women’s prisons in England from the late 18th century to the beginning of the 20th century, drawing attention to the detrimental effect the orthodox closed prison has on penal reform. The text investigates the clash between what was conceptualised as desirable prison policy and the actual implementation and implications of such a penalty on the prisoner. It challenges previous claims about the invisibility of women prisoners in historical penal policy and provides an original analysis of the open prison, taking HMP Askham Grange as a case study, where the history of such an initiative is explored and debated.


Check out my interview on why I wrote the book.


Watch my introduction to the book.



Recent Posts

See All

The crisis of penal populism

The crisis of penal populism: prison legitimacy and its effects on women’s prisons in the UK. Forensic Res Criminol Int J.  6:6; 2018,...

bottom of page