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Carceral Geographies from Inside Prison Gates: The Micro‐Politics of Everyday Racialisation

Stefano Bloch, Enrique Alan Olivares‐Pelayo

2021Antipode36 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Addressing a need for carceral geographical research conducted from inside prison gates, we discuss the spatial context in which racialisation occurs, including its relationship to the performance of prison “politics”. We argue that the convoluted and contentious racial categorisation of prison inmates that begins with “racial priming” and results in “racial sorting” possesses a spatial logic derived from institutional partitioning and street‐level cordoning of individual and group identities. We reveal how racialisation is relied upon through both a self‐segregation and institutional classification system at the micro scale. Based on autoethnographic reflection as formerly jailed and incarcerated individuals, and through a reading of sociological, criminological, and geographical literatures, we argue that the logic of everyday micro‐scale racial identity formation has more to do with location, gang alliances, antagonisms, and the necessary navigating of prison “politics” and protocol than with conceptualisations of “race” engendered by racial capitalism and enforced by the racial state.

Topics & Concepts

PrisonSociologyPoliticsIdentity (music)CriminologyRace (biology)Context (archaeology)Gender studiesRacial politicsObject (grammar)Identity politicsState (computer science)Political scienceLawAestheticsGeographyComputer scienceAlgorithmLinguisticsArchaeologyPhilosophyHomelessness and Social IssuesCriminal Justice and Corrections AnalysisCrime Patterns and Interventions
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