Colette Barry
@colettebarry.bsky.social
160 followers 220 following 4 posts
Assistant Prof in Criminology at University College Dublin. Director of UCD Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice. Interested in prisons and people who work in/around them. Also board games & fancy stationery. people.ucd.ie/colette.barry1
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colettebarry.bsky.social
📌 Call for interview participants 📌

We (me and @louisebrangan.bsky.social) are looking to interview people who have worked as prison officers in Irish prisons at any point during 1970-2010. See further info in poster image. If you're interested in taking part, please consider getting in touch.
Call for participants
Did you work as a prison officer in Ireland during 1970-2010?

We are collecting an oral history of prison officer work in Ireland during 1970-2010
We want to learn about your experiences and memories of working in Irish prisons during this period 

Research team:
Dr Louise Brangan, University of Strathclyde
Dr Colette Barry, University College Dublin

What's involved?
Taking part in an interview (in-person or via Zoom) with one of the researchers 
This will cover your experiences and perspectives on working as a prison officer 

Who can take part? 
We want to interview people who worked as prison officers in any Irish prison(s) at any time during 1970-2010
This includes people who currently work as prison officers and people who have retired or moved on from this work. 
All participation is voluntary and confidential

Interested in participating or would like more information? Please contact: Colette.Barry1@ucd.ie 

Ethical approval granted by University of Strathclyde Ethics Committee. Research approval granted by Irish Prison Service Research Office.
Reposted by Colette Barry
ucdcrim.bsky.social
There’s still plenty of time to register for our upcoming Criminology Salon with @nicolacarr.bsky.social on Monday 20th October at 1pm at UCD Sutherland School of Law.

All welcome! Please register here: www.eventbrite.ie/e/ucd-crimin...

Looking forward to seeing you there!
ucdcrim.bsky.social
Join us at the next UCD Criminology Salon on Mon 20 Oct. @nicolacarr.bsky.social will discuss her recent book book co-edited with @harryannison.bsky.social & Thomas Guiney, Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and Practices. All welcome! Please register here: www.eventbrite.ie/e/ucd-crimin...
UCD Institute of Criminology and Criminal JusticeCriminology Salon: Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and PracticesMonday 20 October 2025, 13:00 – 14:30 Harty Boardroom, Sutherland School of Law, Belfield, Dublin 4 Professor Nicola Carr, Chair of Social Work and Social Policy, Trinity College DublinJoin us at our next Criminology Salon where Professor Nicola Carr will discuss her recent book co-edited with Harry Annison and Thomas Guiney, Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and Practices, published by Bloomsbury. This book brings together a range of academic and practice perspectives to analyse the ideas, institutions and practices of contemporary parole. At a time when many parole systems are strained, this collection aims to encourage systematic reflection on parole’s rationalities, institutions, and practices and to pose ambitious “what if” questions about the possible futures of parole and prison release.
Reposted by Colette Barry
ucdcrim.bsky.social
Join us at the next UCD Criminology Salon on Mon 20 Oct. @nicolacarr.bsky.social will discuss her recent book book co-edited with @harryannison.bsky.social & Thomas Guiney, Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and Practices. All welcome! Please register here: www.eventbrite.ie/e/ucd-crimin...
UCD Institute of Criminology and Criminal JusticeCriminology Salon: Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and PracticesMonday 20 October 2025, 13:00 – 14:30 Harty Boardroom, Sutherland School of Law, Belfield, Dublin 4 Professor Nicola Carr, Chair of Social Work and Social Policy, Trinity College DublinJoin us at our next Criminology Salon where Professor Nicola Carr will discuss her recent book co-edited with Harry Annison and Thomas Guiney, Parole Futures: Rationalities, Institutions and Practices, published by Bloomsbury. This book brings together a range of academic and practice perspectives to analyse the ideas, institutions and practices of contemporary parole. At a time when many parole systems are strained, this collection aims to encourage systematic reflection on parole’s rationalities, institutions, and practices and to pose ambitious “what if” questions about the possible futures of parole and prison release.
Reposted by Colette Barry
droscaro.bsky.social
*Another* heatwave arrives this week and it could be the most intense yet. But prisons are ill-prepared to protect prisoners & staff from environmental harm.

✍️ A new paper examines indoor environmental conditions across multiple prisons

❌ It’s not good.

www.crimeandjustice.org.uk/stale-and-st...
Stale and Still | Centre for Crime and Justice Studies
www.crimeandjustice.org.uk
colettebarry.bsky.social
We are still looking to speak with people who worked as prison officers in Irish prisons at any time during 1970-2010. Interested in sharing your stories? Please get in touch (DM or email [email protected]) - we would love to hear from you! See further info in poster @louisebrangan.bsky.social
Call for participants
Did you work as a prison officer in Ireland during 1970-2010?

We are collecting an oral history of prison officer work in Ireland during 1970-2010
We want to learn about your experiences and memories of working in Irish prisons during this period 

Research team:
Dr Louise Brangan, University of Strathclyde
Dr Colette Barry, University College Dublin

What's involved?
Taking part in an interview (in-person or via Zoom) with one of the researchers 
This will cover your experiences and perspectives on working as a prison officer 

Who can take part? 
We want to interview people who worked as prison officers in any Irish prison(s) at any time during 1970-2010
This includes people who currently work as prison officers and people who have retired or moved on from this work. 
All participation is voluntary and confidential

Interested in participating or would like more information? Please contact: Colette.Barry1@ucd.ie 

Ethical approval granted by University of Strathclyde Ethics Committee. Research approval granted by Irish Prison Service Research Office.
colettebarry.bsky.social
📌 Call for interview participants 📌

We (me and @louisebrangan.bsky.social) are looking to interview people who have worked as prison officers in Irish prisons at any point during 1970-2010. See further info in poster image. If you're interested in taking part, please consider getting in touch.
Call for participants
Did you work as a prison officer in Ireland during 1970-2010?

We are collecting an oral history of prison officer work in Ireland during 1970-2010
We want to learn about your experiences and memories of working in Irish prisons during this period 

Research team:
Dr Louise Brangan, University of Strathclyde
Dr Colette Barry, University College Dublin

What's involved?
Taking part in an interview (in-person or via Zoom) with one of the researchers 
This will cover your experiences and perspectives on working as a prison officer 

Who can take part? 
We want to interview people who worked as prison officers in any Irish prison(s) at any time during 1970-2010
This includes people who currently work as prison officers and people who have retired or moved on from this work. 
All participation is voluntary and confidential

Interested in participating or would like more information? Please contact: Colette.Barry1@ucd.ie 

Ethical approval granted by University of Strathclyde Ethics Committee. Research approval granted by Irish Prison Service Research Office.
Reposted by Colette Barry
louisebrangan.bsky.social
New exhibition, LAB gallery, Dublin: What does it mean to know?
Sinead McCann & I have two sculptural pieces. They're about Magdalene Laundries, but not the past. They are about the present, today, us, and the ways we remember (and misremember)the Laundries dublincityartsoffice.ie/programmes-p...
What does it mean to know? | Dublin City Council Arts Office
Magdalene Laundries were once vast islands of abandonment marking our Irish social landscape. They are closed now, but their legacies linger. When the gates were locked for the last time in 1996,...
dublincityartsoffice.ie
colettebarry.bsky.social
We are very lucky to have @cianoconcubhair.bsky.social and @tommygeaux.bsky.social joining us at UCD next week. It's my first event as new Director of the UCD Institute of Criminology and Criminal Justice, and I'm pleased to be able to continue this series started by the wonderful Dr Deirdre Healy.