This case study provides a critical discourse analysis of 121 letters of complaint and self-advocacy authored by Natasha Keating, a trans woman incarcerated in two Australian male correctional facilities from 2000 to 2007. During her incarceration, Natasha experienced victimization, misgendering, microaggression, and institutional discrimination. Despite this, Natasha embodied and 'fought' against the injustices she experienced, whilst seeking to speak for other trans incarcerated persons also silenced and treated with indifference, contributing to changes in the carceral system. This original case study analyzes the discursive strategies Natasha employed to construct and reclaim an affirming self-identity through a deliberate campaign to e...
Based on twenty-four months of multi-sited anthropological fieldwork, this dissertation traces the c...
The treatment and placement of transgender individuals within the UK prison system has garnered cons...
Background: It is thought that women are responsible for a small minority of recorded crime, especia...
Intro: This psychobiography focuses on the advocacy work of Natasha Keating, a trans woman incarcera...
Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as 'vulnerable populations' due to...
This qualitative study used a phenomenological analytic approach (Hycner, 1985) to examine the exper...
This study analyzes the self-injurious behaviours that women in prison adopt as coping strategies, t...
Purpose: Understanding how transgender people, who committed criminal offenses and are detained in p...
Most incarceration settings around the world are governed by strong cisnormative policies, architect...
The criminal punishment system plays a critical role in the production of race, gender, and sexualit...
This dissertation deals with the question of whether women prisoners’ identities are completely subj...
The conditions of incarceration for transgender individuals in the United States have become a conce...
Women’s imprisonment campaigns gathered momentum in Victoria, Australia from the late 1970s on...
Prisons regulate identities and what rights get recognized and protected in a prison setting. Gender...
As one of the fastest growing populations in the prison system, transwomen have a unique relationshi...
Based on twenty-four months of multi-sited anthropological fieldwork, this dissertation traces the c...
The treatment and placement of transgender individuals within the UK prison system has garnered cons...
Background: It is thought that women are responsible for a small minority of recorded crime, especia...
Intro: This psychobiography focuses on the advocacy work of Natasha Keating, a trans woman incarcera...
Trans women incarcerated throughout the world have been described as 'vulnerable populations' due to...
This qualitative study used a phenomenological analytic approach (Hycner, 1985) to examine the exper...
This study analyzes the self-injurious behaviours that women in prison adopt as coping strategies, t...
Purpose: Understanding how transgender people, who committed criminal offenses and are detained in p...
Most incarceration settings around the world are governed by strong cisnormative policies, architect...
The criminal punishment system plays a critical role in the production of race, gender, and sexualit...
This dissertation deals with the question of whether women prisoners’ identities are completely subj...
The conditions of incarceration for transgender individuals in the United States have become a conce...
Women’s imprisonment campaigns gathered momentum in Victoria, Australia from the late 1970s on...
Prisons regulate identities and what rights get recognized and protected in a prison setting. Gender...
As one of the fastest growing populations in the prison system, transwomen have a unique relationshi...
Based on twenty-four months of multi-sited anthropological fieldwork, this dissertation traces the c...
The treatment and placement of transgender individuals within the UK prison system has garnered cons...
Background: It is thought that women are responsible for a small minority of recorded crime, especia...