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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Borstal_BoyBorstal Boy - Wikipedia

    Borstal Boy is a 1958 autobiographical book by Brendan Behan. The story depicts a young, fervently idealistic Behan, who loses his naïveté over the three years of his sentence to a juvenile borstal, softening his radical Irish republican stance and warming to his British fellow prisoners. [1]

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  3. The borstal boy was not to be beaten or abused into submission and self-loathing, but rather through a system of non-violent discipline and rewards for good behaviour, converted into a decent,...

  4. Borstal Boy, autobiographical work by Irish writer Brendan Behan, published in 1958. The book portrays the author’s early rebelliousness, his involvement with the Irish Republican cause, and his subsequent incarceration for two years in an English Borstal, or reformatory, at age 16. Interspersed.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. Summary. In 1939, Behan was discovered in Liverpool with bomb-making materials and arrested as an IRA terrorist. Sixteen years old, he was treated as a juvenile and...

  6. Apr 11, 2014 · Feltham Borstal was closed due to low numbers in February 1916, presumably because of the declining male crime rate during the war, and the fact that youths were being diverted into the forces (8).

  7. Borstal system, English reformatory system designed for youths between 16 and 21, named after an old convict prison at Borstal, Kent. The system was introduced in 1902 but was given its basic form by Sir Alexander Paterson, who became a prison commissioner in 1922.

  8. The borstal system was in operation between 1902-1982 and separately housed boys and girls, generally between 16-21 years of age. There were two broad categories of borstal institutions, ‘closed’ or ‘open’.

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