RT Article T1 Penal reform, anti-carceral feminist campaigns and the politics of change in women’s prisons, Victoria, Australia JF Punishment & society VO 20 IS 3 SP 283 OP 307 A1 Carlton, Bree LA English YR 2018 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1743481136 AB This paper emphasises the importance of locating contemporary abolitionist social movements within a continuum of broader struggles against structural injustice. Previous decades have seen the re-emergence of women’s penal reform programmes framed as progressive solutions for alleviating the structural disadvantages and harms associated with imprisonment. Abolitionists have provided fierce critiques of the risks these pose in reinforcing the legitimacy and scale of imprisonment. However, we have yet to articulate a clear vision regarding the utility of reform in relation to decarceration strategies. In presenting a critical exploration of anti-carceral feminist campaign work in Victoria, Australia, this paper advocates the need to move beyond the simplistically conceived dualism of reform and abolition. The analysis explores how anti-carceral feminists have used reform as a resistance strategy within Victorian anti-discrimination campaigns in the 1980s and 1990s. Placed in historical context, these campaigns demonstrate the transformative possibilities and risks associated with the necessary navigation and pursuit of reformist strategies that is fundamental to a politics and practice of abolition. K1 Abolition K1 Anti-carceral feminism K1 Penal Reform K1 Women K1 Imprisonment K1 Australia K1 Victoria DO 10.1177/1462474516680205