RT Article T1 Lost in translation: looking for transgender identity in women’s prisons and locating aggressors in prisoner culture JF Critical criminology VO 23 IS 1 SP 1 OP 20 A1 Sumner, Jennifer Macy A2 Sexton, Lori LA English YR 2015 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1850472165 AB The incarceration of transgender prisoners in men’s prisons is a burgeoning topic of legal challenge, policy development, and social science inquiry. The conspicuous absence of comparable attention to women’s facilities may facilitate a tacit assumption that what is known about transgender prisoners in men’s prisons translates seamlessly to women’s facilities. This paper interrogates this assumption by examining current understandings of what it means to be transgender in a women’s prison. Findings from focus groups with prisoners and staff reveal that gender is understood as both reflected by and constituted through social interaction. Specifically, in attempting to explain the concept of "transgender" in women’s prisons, this work instead reveals a different prevailing concept in prisoner culture: "aggressor." Unlike transgender, aggressor does not denote gender identity; rather, it implies presentation and performance as reflective of gendered ways of navigating relationships within the context of a sex-segregated setting. These findings simultaneously affirm the extant literature on gender and sexuality in women’s prisons and complicate the translation of the identity-based concept "transgender" from men’s prisons to a women’s prison. NO Literaturverzeichnis: Seite 19-20 K1 Focus Group K1 Gender Identity K1 Gender Nonconformity K1 Gender Performance K1 Prison Environment DO 10.1007/s10612-014-9243-6