PLIAS Resettlement
  • Home
  • About
    • Overview
    • Staff & Trustees
    • Funders
    • Work for us
  • Our Projects
    • Information, Advice & Guidance
    • Employment
    • Education
    • Mentoring
    • Engagement Forum
    • Susan & Alex de Mont Legacy Fund
    • David Stewart Bursary
    • 3C – Care, Connect, Community
    • Youth Works
    • Building Futures
    • P&ACT Project
  • News & Blog
  • Work with us
  • Contact
  • Donate
hardmandirectory
June 10 2019

Resources for people in prison

JoeGardham News

The new edition of Hardman Trust’s Hardman Directory contains a new section on dealing with debt as well as more information on mentoring schemes, ex-offender friendly employers, and Citizens Advice updated information on benefit changes.

The 1,350 copies of the print edition will be sent to all prison libraries in the UK with the August edition of Inside Time. The Directory is the ‘go-to’ resource for prisoners, ex-offenders seeking funding support for personal development and resettlement purposes and it is also a guide for those who support them.

The e-version is available for free.

Find out more here

Share this:

  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)

Related Posts

hardmandirectory

News

Hardman Directory goes online

muslim_in_jail-462x239

News

Making best use of your time in prison

dsc_8184

News

The impact of criminal records on people from BAME backgrounds

Search

Privacy Policy

Copyright © PLIAS Resettlement Ltd. All Rights Reserved.

PLIAS Resettlement Ltd. is a registered charity no. 1119468 and a company limited by guarantee, registered in England no. 5644439

Website: Social Vision
Images: All You Need is Love Photography

Contact

PLIAS Resettlement, Unit 12 Bridge Park Complex, Harrow Road, London, NW10 0RG
Tel: 0208 838 6800
Email: enquiries@plias.co.uk

Latest posts

  • hardmandirectoryHardman Directory goes online
  • muslim_in_jail-462x239Making best use of your time in prison
  • dsc_8184The impact of criminal records on people from BAME backgrounds