Abstract
AbstractIn Canada, there is renewed attention to the violence experienced by Indigenous peoples in residential schools, by police, through hyper-imprisonment and child removal, in hospitals, and in the contemporary education system. All of these issues are interlinked and outcomes of the carceral state—defined as the policing, monitoring, surveillance, criminalization and imprisonment of people, especially Indigenous and other racialized peoples. In this article, I define and illustrate what the carceral state looks like in Canada. I articulate the current approach to studying the carceral in political science, note the paucity of research in the Canadian context and show where attention has been cast previously. I describe an improved approach to studying the carceral, arguing that a decolonized approach to studying the carceral must be relational and abolitionist, seeking to reduce and eliminate the use of carceral interventions.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science
Reference165 articles.
1. Department of Justice Canada. 2020. “Overrepresentation of Indigenous People in the Canadian Criminal Justice System: Causes and Responses.” Retrieved 1 December 2021 from: https://www.justice.gc.ca/eng/rp-pr/jr/oip-cjs/p3.html.
2. The Violence Within: Canadian Modern Statehood and the Pan-territorial Residential School System Ideal
3. Against Punishment: Centering Work, Wages and Uneven Development in Mapping the Carceral State;Story;Social Justice,2018
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