Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogating the experience and control of spaces of imprisonment, detention and confinement. Scholars have explored the paradoxical nature of incarcerated experience as individuals oscillate between moments of fixity and motion as they are transported to/from carceral environments. This paper draws upon the convict ship – an example yet to gain attention within these emerging discussions – which is both an exemplar of this paradox and a lens through which to complicate understandings of carceral (im)mobilities. The ship is a space of macro-movement from point A to B, whilst simultaneously a site of apparent confinement for those aboard who are unable t...
Arguably we speak now of living in a ‘carceral age’ more so than ever before. Yet how does this car...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
This article deconstructs a binary that has arisen between prisons as, on the one hand, ‘total insti...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Typically, to be incarcerated is to be fixed: limited within specific parameters or boundaries with ...
This paper tracks the impact of prison transfers (and mobility considerations more generally) on the...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
This paper explores the use of digital scholarship to understand the porous boundaries of the prison...
Carceral geography has yet to define the ‘carceral’, with implications for its own development, its ...
This is the first book to provide a comprehensive historical-geographical lens to the development an...
In a previous contribution , we argued that the carceral should no longer be considered as consubsta...
In the age of Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow (2010), promises to depopulate overcrowded Ameri...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
Criminologists usually pay little attention to carceral spaces, and, when they do, they usually do n...
Arguably we speak now of living in a ‘carceral age’ more so than ever before. Yet how does this car...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
This article deconstructs a binary that has arisen between prisons as, on the one hand, ‘total insti...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Recent literature in carceral geography has attended to the importance of mobilities in interrogatin...
Typically, to be incarcerated is to be fixed: limited within specific parameters or boundaries with ...
This paper tracks the impact of prison transfers (and mobility considerations more generally) on the...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Palgrave Macmillan via t...
This paper explores the use of digital scholarship to understand the porous boundaries of the prison...
Carceral geography has yet to define the ‘carceral’, with implications for its own development, its ...
This is the first book to provide a comprehensive historical-geographical lens to the development an...
In a previous contribution , we argued that the carceral should no longer be considered as consubsta...
In the age of Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow (2010), promises to depopulate overcrowded Ameri...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
Criminologists usually pay little attention to carceral spaces, and, when they do, they usually do n...
Arguably we speak now of living in a ‘carceral age’ more so than ever before. Yet how does this car...
This paper brings together carceral and labour geographies to highlight new research avenues and emp...
This article deconstructs a binary that has arisen between prisons as, on the one hand, ‘total insti...