Disability incarcerated : imprisonment and disability in the United States and Canada
Liat Ben-Moshe (Editor), Chris Chapman (Editor), Allison C. Carey (Editor)
Disability Incarcerated offers an outstanding collection of interdisciplinary scholarship examining the incarceration and segregation of people with disabilities the United States and Canada. Disability Incarcerated gathers thirteen contributions from an impressive array of fields. Taken together, these essays assert that a complex understanding of disability is crucial to an understanding of incarceration, and that we must expand what has come to be called 'incarceration.' The chapters in this book examine a host of sites, such as prisons, institutions for people with developmental disabilities, psychiatric hospitals, treatment centers, special education, detention centers, and group homes; explore why various sites should be understood as incarceration; and discuss the causes and effects of these sites historically and currently. This volume includes a preface by Professor Angela Y. Davis and an afterword by Professor Robert McRuer
1 online resource
9781322048178, 9781137388476, 1322048177, 1137388471
888360979
Foreword
Angela Y. Davis Acknowledgments Preface: An Overview of Disability Incarcerated
Allison Carey, Liat Ben-Moshe, & Chris Chapman PART I. INTERLOCKING HISTORIES AND LEGACIES OF CONFINEMENT 1. Reconsidering Confinement: Interlocking Locations and Logics of Incarceration
Chris Chapman, Allison C. Carey, & Liat Ben-Moshe 2. Five Centuries' Material Reforms and Ethical Reformulations of Social Elimination
Chris Chapman 3. Creating the Back Ward: The Triumph of Custodialism and the Uses of Therapeutic Failure in Nineteenth Century Idiot Asylums
Phil Ferguson 4. Eugenics Incarceration and Expulsion: Daniel G. and Andrew T.'s Deportation from 1928 Toronto, Canada
Geoffrey Reaume 5. Crippin' Jim Crow: Disability and the School-to-Prison Pipeline
Nirmala Erevelles 6. Walking the Line Between the Past and the Future: Parents' Resistance and Commitment to Institutionalization
Allison C. Carey & Lucy Gu 7. Remembering Institutional Erasures: The meaning of histories of disability incarceration in Ontario
Jihan Abbas & Jijian Voronka PART II. INTERLOCKING OPPRESSIONS, CONTEMPORARY LOCKDOWN AND CONTESTED FUTURES 8. The New Asylums: Madness & Mass Incarceration in the Neoliberal Era
Michael Rembis 9. It Can't be Fixed Because It's Not Broken: Racism and Disability in the Prison Industrial Complex
Syrus Ware, Joan Ruzsa & Giselle Dias 10. Chemical Constraint: Experiences of Psychiatric Coercion, Restraint, and Detention as Carceratory Techniques
Erick Fabris & Katie Aubrecht 11. Racing Madness: The Terrorizing Madness of the Post-9/11 Terrorist Body
Shaista Patel 12. Refugee Camps, Asylum Detention, and the Geopolitics of Transnational Mobility: Disability and its Intersections with Humanitarian Confinement
Mansha Mirza 13. Self-Advocacy: The Emancipation Movement Led by People with Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities
Mark Friedman & Ruthie-Marie Beckwith 14. Alternatives to (Disability) Incarceration
Liat Ben-Moshe Afterword
Robert McRuer
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