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1 – 10 of 23Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Jens P. Flanding, Genevieve M. Grabman and Sheila Q. Cox
Intergenerational confinement is an under-recognized, policy-driven issue which greatly impacts Indigenous and racialized peoples in countries with ongoing colonial legacies…
Abstract
Intergenerational confinement is an under-recognized, policy-driven issue which greatly impacts Indigenous and racialized peoples in countries with ongoing colonial legacies. Numerous policy solutions enacted over colonial history have exacerbated instead of mitigated this situation. This chapter advances an improved understanding of the impacts of carceral legacies, moving beyond the dominant focus of parental incarceration in the literature. Focusing on Indigenous peoples, multiple generations in families and communities have been subjected to changing methods of confinement and removal. Using critical policy analysis and interview research, this chapter interrogates these intergenerational impacts of carceral policy-making in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand. Drawing on qualitative interviews with 124 people in the three case countries, this chapter centers perspectives of people who have been intergenerationally confined in carceral institutions. With a goal of transformation, it then explores an alternative orientation to policy-making that seeks to acknowledge, account for, and address the harmful direct and indirect ripple-effects of carceral strategies over generations.
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Aarhus Kommunes Biblioteker (Teknisk Bibliotek), Ingerslevs Plads 7, Aarhus, Denmark. Representative: V. NEDERGAARD PEDERSEN (Librarian).