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Out of the Box

An architect campaigns to end construction of prisons with solitary confinement cells. Plus, how US prisons obtain drugs for lethal injections.

We talk solitary confinement in America, and hear from an architect who is urging colleagues to stop designing facilities with long-term isolation units. Then, we hear about the sketchy world that US prisons enter to obtain drugs for lethal injections. And, why just being labelled a β€˜gangster’ could lengthen your sentence in an American jail.

Also, the story of an HIV survivor who scientists are hoping will help reveal some of the virus’s secrets. The essayist Deepak Singh muses on the sweet smell of traffic. And believe it or not, the best performers in the New York City subway actually audition for their spots.

(Photo: A man in solitary confinement. Credit: Getty Images)

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27 minutes

Last on

Sat 13 Jun 2015 19:32GMT

Chapters

  • The Box

    Life in solitary confinement, alone, 23 hours a day

    Duration: 04:05

  • Street Gangs

    How being labelled a β€˜gangster’ could lengthen your prison sentence in America

    Duration: 03:31

  • HIV Survivor

    Doctors hope to learn a lot about HIV from long-term survivor Kai Brothers

    Duration: 05:23

  • Lethal Injection

    US prisons enter a sketchy world to obtain drugs to carry out executions

    Duration: 04:51

  • Nostalgic Fumes

    Essayist Deepak Singh muses on the sweet smell of traffic

    Duration: 01:48

  • Subway Blues

    An above ground audition for underground stardom

    Duration: 05:18

Broadcasts

  • Sat 13 Jun 2015 04:32GMT
  • Sat 13 Jun 2015 13:32GMT
  • Sat 13 Jun 2015 19:32GMT

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