Incarceration – Short Sharp Shock

        

Youth detention centres in the 1980s

Event Details
Date: , 2025
Time:
Location: Incarceration Room - Level 1
Venue: M Shed, BS1 4RN
Price: Free
With: Carlos Guarita, Colin Adamson
Series: Bristol Radical History Festival 2025
Page Details
Section: Events
Subjects: Modern History (Post World War II)
Tags: , , , , , ,
Posted: Modified:

In 1979 the new Tory government led by by Margaret Thatcher and Home Secretary, Willie Whitelaw, abolished borstals for young offenders and introduced a new system of ‘youth detention centres’ employing harsh, quasi-military discipline. They proudly claimed in their party manifesto that they were going to “experiment with a tougher regime as a short, sharp shock for young criminals”.

Using a series of fascinating images taken inside two such institutions in the mid 1980s, Glenochil and Kirklevington Grange, by radical photographer Carlos Guarita and the memories of an inmate Colin Adamson, this photo-essay presentation tells the story, first hand, of what it was like to be incarcerated in a ‘youth detention centre’ and to be subject to ‘short, sharp, shock’.

1 Comment

  1. I was in campsfield house Kidlington Oxford detention centre
    In 1981 at the time the seven tiers song came out 🤣
    It was an absolute s******* of a place
    The prison officers were brutal kicking punching and slapping people
    It certainly taught me a lesson 😭

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