Beyond Incarcerated Identities

Marcus Harmes, S. Hopkins, H. Farley
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引用次数: 3

Abstract

Incarcerated students face multiple obstacles and constraints while attempting to complete tertiary and pre-tertiary educational programs within Australian prisons. Some of these barriers relate to the individual's attitudes and actions, during and prior to imprisonment, while other barriers may relate to systemic bias and social disadvantages, which the individual cannot control. The classed and racialized realities of Australia's criminal justice system are evident in the dramatically disproportionate rate of imprisonment of Indigenous people, and in Australian state governments' increasingly punitive approach to crime and sentencing which typically captures already excluded and marginalised populations. This prevailing ‘criminology of the other,' creates particular tensions for incarcerated students, who are typically attempting to construct positive student identities, as an alternative to being defined as ‘other,' ‘criminal' or ‘deviant.' Using data from a focus group discussion with 12 male incarcerated students inside an Australian prison, this article gives voice to our incarcerated university students, their attempts to construct new horizons for the self through education, and the numerous barriers they encounter along the way.
超越被监禁的身份
被监禁的学生在试图在澳大利亚监狱完成高等教育和高等教育预科课程时面临多种障碍和限制。其中一些障碍与个人在监禁期间和之前的态度和行为有关,而其他障碍可能与个人无法控制的系统性偏见和社会劣势有关。澳大利亚刑事司法系统的阶级化和种族化现实体现在土著人被监禁的比例极其不成比例,以及澳大利亚各州政府对犯罪和量刑日益严厉的做法,这些做法通常是针对已经被排斥和边缘化的人群。这种盛行的“他者犯罪学”给被监禁的学生造成了特别的紧张,他们通常试图构建积极的学生身份,作为被定义为“他者”、“罪犯”或“越轨者”的另一种选择。本文利用对澳大利亚监狱内12名被监禁男性学生的焦点小组讨论的数据,为我们被监禁的大学生发声,他们试图通过教育为自己构建新的视野,以及他们在此过程中遇到的众多障碍。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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