Industrial relations in the UK prison service
- 1 March 1995
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Employee Relations
- Vol. 17 (2) , 64-88
- https://doi.org/10.1108/01425459510085920
Abstract
Industrial relations problems in the UK Prison Service are part of the wider crisis within the penal system over the past 30 years, from the era of the Mountbatten Report of 1966 to the Woolf Report of 1990, and beyond. Incidents and disputes, concerning both industrial relations and the problems of prison regimes, attract wide media reporting, not all of it accurate. Attempts to redress this selectivity, and to demonstrate the complex linkages between industrial relations and the administration, management and reform of the penal system. Focusing mainly on the Home Office Prison Service (HOPS), and on the three main trade unions, highlights the differing political goals of the prison service, and the perpetual turmoil without clear purpose in which the principal actors seem to be enmeshed.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- ″Porridge″ for Profit – Back to the Future: The Origins of a National Prison ServiceInternational Journal of Public Sector Management, 1992
- Capitalist Discipline and Corporatist Law—Part IIIndustrial Law Journal, 1982