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      • Barbara E. Euler

        Hello, I am the author and publisher of a German police story situated in Bruges. Available in print and as e-book.   Look at the e-book here: https://www.neobooks.com/ebooks/barbara-e--euler-raphaels-rueckkehr-ebook-neobooks-AXGc1FyzA_UjA5yswzJR?toplistType=undefined   Look at the print and e-book here: https://www.amazon.de/Raphaels-R%C3%BCckkehr-Krimi-Barbara-Euler/dp/3752943653/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_de_DE=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&dchild=1&keywords=barbara+e.+euler&qid=1602840731&sr=8-1

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      • Fiction
        October 2016

        Listen to the Child

        by Elizabeth Howard

        It’s 1875 and London’s East End heaves with children who work as prostitutes, hawkers, beggars and thieves. Constance rescues as many as she can, but there is only so much she and other charity workers can do. Then a solution is offered that sounds perfect – Canada, with its wide green plains, has farmers who need help, while their wives want housemaids. Shipping children to this land of plenty offers them a future far from the temptations of London’s overcrowded streets. Widow, Mary Trupper, is wary, but the promise of good food and an education for her children is strong. Are the fields green? Is the food plentiful? For some, yes. For others, the harsh winters reflect the welcome.

      • Prisons

        Fifty Year Stretch

        Prisons and Imprisonment 1980-2030

        by Stephen Shaw (Author)

        An absorbing and highly innovative work by one of the 1st’s leading experts on prisons and penal reform. This book charts developments across a fifty year time frame beginning in 1980 at the start of a growth in the prison population of England and Wales (and other parts of the world) and ends with a prospective view taking events up to 2030. Shaw deals with key events, issues and developments and the book will be invaluable to anyone wishing to cut through the mass of fine detail and data which can be found in other works in favour of a direct, authoritative and well-informed short History. Novel, original and highly accessible, this book makes it altogether easier to understand penal affairs. Touching on the key events which continue to shape penal policy in England and Wales, it looks at ‘seismic shifts’ since 1980, points to ‘a new democratic mood’ and anticipates how things might shape up in coming decades. A remarkable account which goes to the heart of penal policy in England and Wales. Refreshing and insightful, this work will prove to be invaluable to practitioners, students, researchers and those wishing to understand ‘the new democratic mood’, its relationship to crime and punishment and where it is leading. Reviews 'A lively and readable introduction to prison policy past, present and future. A personal perspective which will challenge and provoke': Dr. Nick Flynn, De Montfort University 'What we particularly liked about "Fifty Year Stretch" is its construction as a well-informed short History of prisons policy following the 'prison works' objective which may well be re-assessed in the coming years... the question which remains to be answered is does prison work? Stephen Shaw's book certainly does!': Phillip Taylor MBE and Elizabeth Taylor of Richmond Green Chambers Author Stephen Shaw was the Prisons and Probation Ombudsman for England and Wales giving him an unusually close view of prisons, Criminal Justice and the preoccupations of prisoners and prison staff. He has also investigated and reported on all deaths in custody. He was also formerly Director of the 1st’s much-respected Prison Reform Trust (PRT). Martin Narey is chief executive of Barnardos having previously worked as Director General of HM Prison Service, Chief Executive of the National Offender Management Service (NOMS) and as a Permanent Secretary within the Home Office

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