Navigating intimate trans citizenship while incarcerated in Australia and the United States

Author:

Brömdal Annette1ORCID,Halliwell Sherree1,Sanders Tait1,Clark Kirsty A2,Gildersleeve Jessica1,Mullens Amy B1,Phillips Tania M1,Debattista Joseph3,du Plessis Carol1,Daken Kirstie1,Hughto Jaclyn M W4

Affiliation:

1. University of Southern Queensland, Australia

2. Vanderbilt University, USA

3. Metro North Hospital and Health Service, Australia

4. Brown University, USA

Abstract

Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as “vulnerable populations” due to significant victimization, mistreatment, lack of gender-affirming care, and human rights violations, which confers greater risk of trauma, self-harm, and suicide compared with the general incarcerated population. Most incarceration settings around the world are segregated by the person's sex characteristics (i.e., male or female) and governed by strong cis and gender normative paradigms. This analysis seeks to better understand and appreciate how the “instructions” and the “authorities” that regulate trans women's corporeal representation, housing options and sense of self-determination implicate and affect their agency and actions in handling intimacies related to their personal life. Drawing upon lived incarcerated experiences of 24 trans women in Australia and the United States, and employing Ken Plummer's notion of intimate citizenship, this analysis explores how trans women navigate choices and ways “to do” gender, identities, bodies, emotions, desires and relationships while incarcerated in men's prisons and governed by cis and gender normative paradigms. This critical analysis contributes to understanding how incarcerated trans women through grit, resilience, and ingenuity still navigate ways to embody, express and enact their intimate citizenship in innovative and unique ways.

Funder

Yale Fund for Gay and Lesbian Studies

HIV Foundation Queensland

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Psychology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Gender Studies

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