研究大规模监禁:从东方到西方监狱劳工的性别与政治。

IF 1.7 2区 社会学 Q2 WOMENS STUDIES
Signs Pub Date : 2010-01-01 DOI:10.1086/652917
Lynne A Haney
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引用次数: 34

摘要

本文探讨了两所妇女刑罚机构的政治和劳动实践:匈牙利的一所最高安全设施和加利福尼亚州的一所社区设施。与其他倾向于在个人或宏观经济层面上运作的监禁叙述不同,本文分析了监狱的具体制度关系,并使它们仅仅反映监狱-工业综合体的逻辑的假设复杂化。基于在两种截然不同的刑罚体系中多年的人种学研究,我描述了监狱如何在不同的制度和文化中对劳动进行规定的差异:匈牙利监狱将雇佣劳动定位为一种权利和义务,它构成了女性社会关系和与他人联系的基础,而美国监狱将雇佣劳动排除在女性的生活之外,这样她们就可以继续自我完善和自我治愈的工作。通过比较,我揭示了监狱如何既可以利用也可以颠覆赋予妇女工作的更广泛的社会意义,使人们很难将监狱劳动视为完全剥削或虐待。我还认为,拒绝让女囚犯从事雇佣劳动,可能是一种比要求她们从事雇佣劳动更深刻的惩罚形式。通过将两种截然不同的刑罚背景下的工作话语和实践并置,本文从根本上对监狱劳动的政治经济学进行了批判性反思。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Working through mass incarceration: gender and the politics of prison labor from east to west.

This article explores the politics and practices of labor in two penal institutions for women: a maximum security facility for women in Hungary and a community‐based facility for women in California. Diverging from other accounts of imprisonment that tend to operate at either the individual or macroeconomic level, this article analyzes the concrete institutional relations of prison and complicates the assumption that they simply reflect the logic of the prison‐industrial complex. Based on years of ethnographic work in two very different penal systems, I describe variation in how prisons institute labor within and across institutions and cultures: the Hungarian facility positioned wage labor as a right and an obligation that formed the basis of women’s social relationships and ties to others, while the U.S. prison excluded wage labor from women’s lives so they could get on with the work of self‐improvement and personal healing. From the comparison, I reveal how prisons can both draw on and subvert broader social meanings assigned to women’s work, making it difficult to view prison labor as wholly exploitative or abusive. I also argue that refusing to allow female inmates to engage in wage labor can be a more profound form of punishment than requiring it of them. By juxtaposing the discourses and practices of work in two very different penal contexts, this article offers a critical reflection on the political economy of prison labor from the ground up.

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来源期刊
Signs
Signs WOMENS STUDIES-
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
69
期刊介绍: Recognized as the leading international journal in women"s studies, Signs has since 1975 been at the forefront of new directions in feminist scholarship. Signs publishes pathbreaking articles of interdisciplinary interest addressing gender, race, culture, class, nation, and/or sexuality either as central focuses or as constitutive analytics; symposia engaging comparative, interdisciplinary perspectives from around the globe to analyze concepts and topics of import to feminist scholarship; retrospectives that track the growth and development of feminist scholarship, note transformations in key concepts and methodologies, and construct genealogies of feminist inquiry; and new directions essays, which provide an overview of the main themes, controversies.
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