RT Article T1 Carceral racialization, prison segregation, and the Integrated Housing Program in Arizona JF Theoretical criminology VO 28 IS 2 SP 212 OP 231 A1 Bloch, Stefano A2 Olivares-Pelayo, Enrique Alan LA English YR 2024 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1888278692 AB Prisoners in the Arizona Department of Corrections, Rehabilitation, and Reentry (ADCRR) coordinate to circumvent full racial housing integration, revealing how “race” and adherence to the “racial code” is used as an organizing concept in carceral settings that is distinct from conceptualizations of race and politics of identity within free society. In addition to providing a review of the literature on the complexity of prison racialization, we base our discussion of racialization and adherence to the racial code on our combined experience as formerly racialized and gang-affiliated inmates, as well as on insights from informal and semi-structured interviews with prisoners who have navigated attempts at racial integration as part of the ADCRR's recently adopted Integrated Housing Program. K1 Arizona K1 Carceral geography K1 Racialization K1 Race K1 Prison DO 10.1177/13624806231179127