This Article posits that the issue of gender-affirming genital surgery conjures competing constructions of the incarcerated trans body that reflect different conceptions of its relationship to state power. It offers a reading of this conflict as a clash between a biopolitical and a necropolitical conception of the incarcerated trans body. Biopolitics is a theory of state power that views the state as the arbiter and administrator of life and all life processes. Necropolitics, on the other hand, posits that sovereignty is defined by its power to mark out certain populations for social and literal death
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as 'vulnerable populations' due to...
The most recent statistics indicate there are an estimated 3,200 transgender inmates in the United S...
Transgender refers to “people whose gender identity, gender expression, or behavior does not conform...
As one of the fastest growing populations in the prison system, transwomen have a unique relationshi...
This article introduces complexity into understandings around the relationships between human rights...
With Chelsea Manning’s case making headlines, and hit television show Orange Is the New Black highli...
The conditions of incarceration for transgender individuals in the United States have become a conce...
Current medical constructions of trans identities reflect heterosexist understandings of gender expr...
This article argues that at present, there is not sufficient certainty within the medical and scient...
This Article explores the incarceration conditions of trans and gender-nonconforming (TGNC) people i...
The criminal punishment system plays a critical role in the production of race, gender, and sexualit...
People who are transgender and incarcerated face a unique set of human rights challenges. Courts hav...
This note examines how federal and state prisons do not currently have a policy for prison inmates l...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020In the US today, 2.3 million prisoners have a constitu...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as 'vulnerable populations' due to...
The most recent statistics indicate there are an estimated 3,200 transgender inmates in the United S...
Transgender refers to “people whose gender identity, gender expression, or behavior does not conform...
As one of the fastest growing populations in the prison system, transwomen have a unique relationshi...
This article introduces complexity into understandings around the relationships between human rights...
With Chelsea Manning’s case making headlines, and hit television show Orange Is the New Black highli...
The conditions of incarceration for transgender individuals in the United States have become a conce...
Current medical constructions of trans identities reflect heterosexist understandings of gender expr...
This article argues that at present, there is not sufficient certainty within the medical and scient...
This Article explores the incarceration conditions of trans and gender-nonconforming (TGNC) people i...
The criminal punishment system plays a critical role in the production of race, gender, and sexualit...
People who are transgender and incarcerated face a unique set of human rights challenges. Courts hav...
This note examines how federal and state prisons do not currently have a policy for prison inmates l...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2020In the US today, 2.3 million prisoners have a constitu...
This article explores whether a state law imposing a flat ban on the use of funds to provide cross-g...
Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as 'vulnerable populations' due to...
The most recent statistics indicate there are an estimated 3,200 transgender inmates in the United S...