Carceral protectionism and the perpetually (in)vulnerable

The United States relies on carceralism—mass incarceration and institutionalization, surveillance and control—for its continued operation. The criminalization of difference, particularly in relation to race, disability and queerness, renders certain people as perpetually subject to state violence du...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rodriguez, SM (Author)
Contributors: Ben-Moshe, Liat ; Rakes, H.
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
In: Criminology & criminal justice
Year: 2020, Volume: 20, Issue: 5, Pages: 537-550
Online Access: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Summary:The United States relies on carceralism—mass incarceration and institutionalization, surveillance and control—for its continued operation. The criminalization of difference, particularly in relation to race, disability and queerness, renders certain people as perpetually subject to state violence due to their perceived unruliness. This article relies on two case studies, in Toledo, Ohio and Brooklyn, New York to question the construction and co-optation of vulnerability by state agents and focus on interrelated instances of state violence done under the guise of protectionism of and from unruly subjects. We then discuss the response to these instances of violence- from the state in the form of carceral ableism and sanism, and from local activists trying to navigate the shifting contours of protectionist violence by enacting queer transformative justice.
ISSN:1748-8966
DOI:10.1177/1748895820947450