1st Edition

Carceral Spaces Mobility and Agency in Imprisonment and Migrant Detention

Edited By Dominique Moran, Nick Gill Copyright 2013
262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

262 Pages
by Routledge

This book draws together the work of a new community of scholars with a growing interest in carceral geography: the geographical study of practices of imprisonment and detention. It combines work by geographers on 'mainstream' penal establishments where people are incarcerated by the prevailing legal system, with geographers' recent work on migrant detention centres, where irregular migrants and... Read more
List of Figures and Tables, Notes on Contributors, 1 Introduction, Part I: Mobility, Part II: Space and Agency, Index

Biography

Dominique Moran, University of Birmingham, UK, Nick Gill, University of Exeter, UK and Deirdre Conlon, Saint Peter's College, USA.

’From Nick Gill's eye-opening discussion of the relationship between freedom and mobility, to Deirdre Conlon's fascinating Foucauldian analysis of the hunger strike, this book offers analyses that are empirically strong and theoretically innovative. From a criminological perspective, the book manages chapter by chapter to break new ground even in a familiar territory. You should read it.’ Thomas Ugelvik, University of Oslo, Norway ’Engaging, thought-provoking and insightful, Carceral Spaces shines a much-needed light on contemporary practices of incarceration and detention. Required reading for anyone interested in confinement and the control of ’problematic’ populations in a globalised world.’ Alexandra Hall, University of York, UK and author of Borderwatch: Cultures of Immigration, Detention and Control ’Prisons and immigration detention facilities ostensibly draw sharp divisions between who is inside and who is outside, who is good and who is bad, who is included and who is excluded from society. Contributors to this important volume undermine these dualisms with rich empirical evidence and strong theoretical elaboration that advance the burgeoning field of carceral geography, and offer fresh perspectives to migration studies and criminologists’ study of punishment and society. Carceral Spaces gathers original research on prison regimes and immigration detention estates from an impressive array of sites. This comparative dimension illustrates the international unevenness of spatial practices of confinement. Despite their differences, all carceral regimes create and rely on carceral spaces and carceral mobilities. Indeed, close attention to the relationship between the state’s power to confine and to forcibly move people is the book’s greatest strength. Together, they challenge the idea that prison cells fully extinguish political agency and that mobility necessarily means total freedom. Instead, careful documentation and nuanced theo