RT Article T1 To Be, One Has to Be Somewhere. Spatio-temporality in Prison Segregation JF The British journal of criminology VO 46 IS 4 SP 587 OP 612 A1 Martel, Joane LA English YR 2006 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1639655980 AB Among modern exclusionary strategies (state sponsored or otherwise), prison segregation - the isolation of individuals from general inmate populations - is a particularly camouflaged form of exclusion with considerable impact on identity formation. Drawing from extensive documentary and nominal sources, as well as 45 interviews with women having experienced segregation in Canadian prisons from 1995 to 2003, this paper argues that the regimented and predictable time-space continuum of the prison's ordinary' life flies into pieces in segregation where (1) arbitrary timeframes, and (2) fluid and frugal spatiality keep women on the margin of collective memory. Such time/space configurations engender a loss of ascendancy on individual and collective sense of time/space, leading to the use of multifarious resistance strategies to negotiate personally suitable identities K1 Isolation K1 Strafvollzug K1 Einzelhaft K1 Identitätsbildung K1 Ausgrenzung DO 10.1093/bjc/azl012