The study of penal practices in colonised parts of Asia, Africa, Latin America, the Indian Ocean and the Caribbean has recently witnessed a significant shift. The first generation of research into the coercive measures of colonial states tended to focus rather narrowly on imprisonment. The second generation, which has emerged only in the last five years, has significantly widened their field of vision to incorporate much more than the prison. The most recent literature considers capital and corporal punishment, as well as the larger functioning of police and courts. It also explores in more depth the ways in which indigenous peoples experienced and interpreted their punishments. Finally, this new research is sensitive to the paradoxes and t...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, a certain dissatisfaction becomes apparent in the reco...
What are the various forces influencing the role of the prison in late modern societies? What change...
This chapter argues that abolitionism demands an understanding of the penal/colonial complex - the e...
In the last years there has been a growing effort from different theoretical perspectives to interro...
As humans, none of us want to go to prison. The main reasons being the lack of mobility and poor liv...
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University PressCapital punishment in British colonial Africa was not jus...
This article explores the colonial origins of aspects of law and punishment in Guyana, arguing that ...
This paper was originally presented at the Conference on Punishment of the Jean Bodin Society for th...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
A revised version of this paper was published in the "proceedings" volume for this conference: Co...
The Convict Criminology (CC) network has expanded beyond its American and Canadian roots to the Unit...
The history of imprisonment in British colonial Mauritius is intertwined with its political economy,...
Michel Foucault has explored the ways in which, beginning in the eighteenth century, punishment star...
A pioneering book on prisons in West Africa, Colonial Systems of Control: Criminal Justice in Nigeri...
Anglophone Cameroon is an area conterminous with the present-day North and South Western Regions of ...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, a certain dissatisfaction becomes apparent in the reco...
What are the various forces influencing the role of the prison in late modern societies? What change...
This chapter argues that abolitionism demands an understanding of the penal/colonial complex - the e...
In the last years there has been a growing effort from different theoretical perspectives to interro...
As humans, none of us want to go to prison. The main reasons being the lack of mobility and poor liv...
Copyright © 2008 Cambridge University PressCapital punishment in British colonial Africa was not jus...
This article explores the colonial origins of aspects of law and punishment in Guyana, arguing that ...
This paper was originally presented at the Conference on Punishment of the Jean Bodin Society for th...
This chapter considers the challenges and opportunities that a postcolonial practice might generate ...
A revised version of this paper was published in the "proceedings" volume for this conference: Co...
The Convict Criminology (CC) network has expanded beyond its American and Canadian roots to the Unit...
The history of imprisonment in British colonial Mauritius is intertwined with its political economy,...
Michel Foucault has explored the ways in which, beginning in the eighteenth century, punishment star...
A pioneering book on prisons in West Africa, Colonial Systems of Control: Criminal Justice in Nigeri...
Anglophone Cameroon is an area conterminous with the present-day North and South Western Regions of ...
In the second half of the nineteenth century, a certain dissatisfaction becomes apparent in the reco...
What are the various forces influencing the role of the prison in late modern societies? What change...
This chapter argues that abolitionism demands an understanding of the penal/colonial complex - the e...