We submitted to the Podcast of the Year Awards and have been shortlisted for one category. (Hooray!!) Please can you vote for us.
Go to this link, type in The Locked Up Living podcast and follow the link to post for us.
https://www.britishpodcastawards.com/vote
This is what we wrote about the podcast;
Locked Up Living is on a mission to challenge the silo thinking that pervades macho
organisations such as the criminal justice system by covering subjects that are directly
relevant but haven’t yet had enough visibility to become influential. We have featured
guests tackling subjects with innovative implications for custodial settings (and other toxic
organisations); several of our guests would be considered radical thinkers and we’ve
covered subjects that forensic practitioners are often frightened to talk or even think about.
We are particularly interested in guests whose work shines a spotlight on the challenges to
those who live and work in locked environments and ways to overcome the barriers to well-
being that these obstacles raise. We are especially interested in emotional literacy and
health. Our podcast is popular with those researching or working in prisons and other
locked or challenging environments including criminologists, psychologists,
psychotherapists and other mental health professionals.
This was David and Naomi’s first foray into podcasting. Started as a lockdown spare-time
venture, neither has any experience of audio planning and production so we’ve had to
develop skills as we go along. Several of our listeners are academics who’ve recommended
our podcast to their students and the positive feedback we’ve received has encouraged us
to continue beyond lockdown. We are regularly approached by people wanting to appear
on the podcast to promote their work.
Our weekly podcast was downloaded 14k times during the course of the year.
184. Nick O'Sullivan; Leadership Lessons from the Marines: Finding Opportunity in Every Situation
183. Kaigan Corrie; Beyond the Uniform: Humanizing Prison Officers and Ex-Prisoners
182. Nahid de Belgeonne; Somatic movement and your nervous system
181. Claire Bicknell; Mastering the Art of Networking
180. Chloe Xhidas; Being a woman in the Construction Industry
179. Tony Gammidge, the power of art therapy through animation
178. Rob Hosking. The trauma of policework
177. Aneela Ahmed. Psychotherapist and former OT on having her voice heard as an OT
176. Peter Sterling; Mental disturbance and the worrying return of physical interference in the brain.
175. David Shipley: Being posh in prison
174. Piers Cross; ’Do not grass’. Boarding school culture.
173. Gethin Aldous, film and video game maker on award winning documentary, The Work
172. Stella Assange: Wikileaks founder, journalist Julian Assange & his entrapment by the British state and continuing imprisonment at HMP Belmarsh
171. Ros Watts: Integrating Psychedelics in Therapy
170. Natalia Galicza: Abuse of power in California’s prisons for women.
169: Sarah Turner: Benefits of red light (photo-biomodulation) for the gut-brain connection.
168. Rebecca Morgan. Sex and sexuality among inpatients (and prisoners).
167. Jamie Bennett. New Managerialism and prisons
166. John Adlam and Chris Scanlon. Psycho-Social explorations of Trauma, Exclusion and Vilence
165. Kym Staton, Filmaker: Tragedy and injustice of Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks
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