0
Skip to Content
The Book Nook
Shop Online
Order Books for Collection
Book Nook Online Shop
Bookshop.org Online Shop
Gift Vouchers
Subscriptions
Audiobooks
In Store
Events
Upcoming Events
Past Events
Book Clubs
Tales for Tinies
Junior Book Nook Clubs
BookNookers Book Club
About Us
Our Story
Meet The Team
Awards
Community Initiatives
Judith Illesley Memorial Fund
Book Nook Book Bank
Visit Us
Join Our Mailing List
Login Account
Contact Us
The Book Nook
Shop Online
Order Books for Collection
Book Nook Online Shop
Bookshop.org Online Shop
Gift Vouchers
Subscriptions
Audiobooks
In Store
Events
Upcoming Events
Past Events
Book Clubs
Tales for Tinies
Junior Book Nook Clubs
BookNookers Book Club
About Us
Our Story
Meet The Team
Awards
Community Initiatives
Judith Illesley Memorial Fund
Book Nook Book Bank
Visit Us
Join Our Mailing List
Login Account
Contact Us
Folder: Shop Online
Back
Order Books for Collection
Book Nook Online Shop
Bookshop.org Online Shop
Gift Vouchers
Subscriptions
Audiobooks
In Store
Folder: Events
Back
Upcoming Events
Past Events
Folder: Book Clubs
Back
Tales for Tinies
Junior Book Nook Clubs
BookNookers Book Club
Folder: About Us
Back
Our Story
Meet The Team
Awards
Folder: Community Initiatives
Back
Judith Illesley Memorial Fund
Book Nook Book Bank
Visit Us
Join Our Mailing List
Login Account
Contact Us
Book Nook Online Shop An Architecture of Hope : reimagining the prison, restoring a house, rebuilding myself by Yvonne Jewkes
9781914484780.jpg Image 1 of
9781914484780.jpg
9781914484780.jpg

An Architecture of Hope : reimagining the prison, restoring a house, rebuilding myself by Yvonne Jewkes

£18.99

Should architecture be used for punishment? How might the spaces we inhabit nurture or damage us? How can we begin to start over after the worst has happened?Criminologist Yvonne Jewkes grapples with these questions every day as the world’s leading expert on rehabilitative prison design; she also faces them in her personal life when her partner of 25 years leaves her in the middle of a nightmare renovation project and then lockdown sees her trapped there. Used to fighting the punitive prison system to create spaces that encourage reflection, healing, even hope for those incarcerated, she must learn to be similarly compassionate to herself, as she considers what might help someone at the lowest point in their life to rebuild. There are 11.5 million prisoners worldwide, and most of them will eventually be released back into society.

Yvonne asks: ‘Who would you rather have living next door to you? Or sitting on the train next to your daughter? Someone who has been treated with decency in an environment that has helped to heal them and instilled hope for their future? Or someone who has effectively been caged and dehumanised for years?’ Challenging our expectations of what prisons are for, she takes us along their corridors, into cells, communal spaces, visitors’ areas, and staffrooms, to the architects’ studios where they are designed, and even into her own home, to show us the importance of an architecture of hope in the face of despair.

Quantity:
Add To Cart

Should architecture be used for punishment? How might the spaces we inhabit nurture or damage us? How can we begin to start over after the worst has happened?Criminologist Yvonne Jewkes grapples with these questions every day as the world’s leading expert on rehabilitative prison design; she also faces them in her personal life when her partner of 25 years leaves her in the middle of a nightmare renovation project and then lockdown sees her trapped there. Used to fighting the punitive prison system to create spaces that encourage reflection, healing, even hope for those incarcerated, she must learn to be similarly compassionate to herself, as she considers what might help someone at the lowest point in their life to rebuild. There are 11.5 million prisoners worldwide, and most of them will eventually be released back into society.

Yvonne asks: ‘Who would you rather have living next door to you? Or sitting on the train next to your daughter? Someone who has been treated with decency in an environment that has helped to heal them and instilled hope for their future? Or someone who has effectively been caged and dehumanised for years?’ Challenging our expectations of what prisons are for, she takes us along their corridors, into cells, communal spaces, visitors’ areas, and staffrooms, to the architects’ studios where they are designed, and even into her own home, to show us the importance of an architecture of hope in the face of despair.

Should architecture be used for punishment? How might the spaces we inhabit nurture or damage us? How can we begin to start over after the worst has happened?Criminologist Yvonne Jewkes grapples with these questions every day as the world’s leading expert on rehabilitative prison design; she also faces them in her personal life when her partner of 25 years leaves her in the middle of a nightmare renovation project and then lockdown sees her trapped there. Used to fighting the punitive prison system to create spaces that encourage reflection, healing, even hope for those incarcerated, she must learn to be similarly compassionate to herself, as she considers what might help someone at the lowest point in their life to rebuild. There are 11.5 million prisoners worldwide, and most of them will eventually be released back into society.

Yvonne asks: ‘Who would you rather have living next door to you? Or sitting on the train next to your daughter? Someone who has been treated with decency in an environment that has helped to heal them and instilled hope for their future? Or someone who has effectively been caged and dehumanised for years?’ Challenging our expectations of what prisons are for, she takes us along their corridors, into cells, communal spaces, visitors’ areas, and staffrooms, to the architects’ studios where they are designed, and even into her own home, to show us the importance of an architecture of hope in the face of despair.

Open 7 Days

Monday - Wednesday
Thursday
Friday - Sunday

10am - 4pm
10am - 7pm
10am - 4pm

Visit Us

 

6B High Street
Stewarton
KA3 5AA

Contact Us

Phone: 01560 482374
Email: enquiries@booknookstewarton.co.uk

Scottish Independent Bookshop of the Year 2025