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Bringing together cutting edge and diverse research from international and interdisciplinary perspectives, this book initiates and shapes conversations about transgender people within the criminal justice system.
List of contents
Chapter one - introduction Often Cruel, Sometimes Unusual, and Sadly Predictable: A Look at the Transgender Carceral Nexus around the Globe
Matthew Maycock, Saoirse O'Shea, Valerie JennessPart one Chapter two "I know the degradation, the humiliation around being incarcerated and ostracized, and marginalized, and sexualized: Pathways to incarceration and the incarceration experiences of Black American and First Nations Australian trans women."
Tania M. Phillips, Kirsty A. Clark, Annette Brömdal, Amy B. Mullens, Tait Sanders, Sherree Halliwell, Jessica Gildersleeve, Kirstie Daken, Joseph Debattista, Carol du Plessis, Paul Simpson, Jaclyn M.W. HughtoChapter three, Transgender in deprivation of liberty in Brazil by the lenses of coloniality of power
Fernando Fernandes, Heloisa MelinoChapter four, Trans women and travestis in prisons: experiences, selectivity and criminal treatment.
Eric Seger de Camargo, Guilherme Gomes FerreiraChapter five, "I'm in prison. I'm prisoning myself" - The experiences of transgender men in a women's prison who are perceived as cisgender.
Mia HarrisChapter six "The Only Man in the Village": The Lived Experiences of Transgender Men Serving Sentences in Women's Prisons in England & Wales
Bill RossiChapter seven, "They didn't want me to be myself, they wanted me to be a man": The Lived Experience of a Transgender Individual Incarcerated in a Canadian Men's Correctional Institution.
Lee VandenbroeckChapter eight The current situation and issues of transgender prisoners in Turkey
Ezgi Ildirim, Can CaliciChapter nine, Transgender Peoples' experiences of the Criminal Justice System in Pakistan
Mashal Aamir
Chapter ten, Invisible Identities: Transgender Persons, Prisons and Preliminary Perspectives from India.
Arijeet GhoshPart twoChapter eleven, Transgender and non-binary prisoners in the USA and English and Wales Prison Estates.
Olga Suhomlinova, Saoirse O'SheaChapter twelve, Rights Went Wrong: Situating Trans Reforms in Canada's History of Women-Centered Correctional Transformations.
William HébertChapter thirteen, media Narratives Regarding the Accommodation of Trans Prisoners in Canadian Prisons.
Carla Cesaroni, Victoria GinsleyChapter fourteen, Transgender Perspectives on the Scottish Justice System: On the Subject of the Legal Subject.
Beth CairnsChapter fifteen, transgender Rights in African Confinement: an analysis of recent jurisprudence in Southern Africa.
Rui Garrido, Xaman MinilloChapter sixteen, Is dignity an option? The situation of transgender persons in Swiss prisons
Jean-Sébastien Blanc Chapter seventeen, transgender people in prison in England and Wales: policy and practice in a culture of penal populism.
Caroline Gorden, Caroline HughesChapter eighteen, Prioritising the rights of incarcerated trans and gender diverse people: a case study of a community-led revision of an Australian prison policy.
Paul L. Simpson, Zahra Stardust, Lucky Dodd, Teddy Cook, Mindy Sotiri, Kaz Zinnetti, Tait Sanders, Annette Brömdal, Danika HardimanChapter nineteen bodies, desires and pleasures: resistance of trans women imprisoned in a male prison in Mexico City
Chloé Constant
About the author
Matthew Maycock, PhD, is Senior Lecturer in Criminology at Monash University. He was previously a Baxter Fellow in Community Education at the University of Dundee. Matthew previously worked within the criminal justice system in Scotland as a Learning and Development Researcher at the Scottish Prison Service. Matthew is an anthropologist by training, undertook his PhD at the University of East Anglia (UK), and leads on an ongoing longitudinal study analysing modern slavery and freedom in Nepal through the theoretical lens of masculinity. Throughout various studies, Matthew has consistently worked on gender issues, with critical studies on men and masculinity being a particular focus. Matthew is the co-editor of four edited collections, all focusing on aspects of life in prison, and he sits on the editorial board of three journals as well as being an editor of the
International Journal of Prison Health.Saoirse O'Shea is a non-binary person who underwent "gender affirming surgery" in December 2020. I've worked as an academic in UK-based universities since 2000 and am currently employed as a senior lecturer (associate professor). I sometimes write about my lived experiences as a non-binary person and on gender, queer theory and queer(y)ing gender, and academic theory. I have published with Olga Suhomlinova and others various articles concerned with the lived experiences of transgender people in contact with the criminal justice system in England and Wales in the
British Journal of Criminology and the
International Journal of Mental Health as well as a chapter in
Advances in Trans Studies: Moving Toward Gender Expansion and Trans Hope. Vol. 32 (Johnson, A.H., Baker A., Rogers, T. and Taylor, T. eds.). Olga and I are also currently writing a book for publication in 2024,
Transgender and Non-binary Prisoners' Experiences in England and Wales: Coming Out, based on our longitudinal research. I like cats, chocolate, fashion, and tattoos.
Valerie Jenness is Distinguished Professor of Criminology, Law and Society at the University of California, Irvine. She is the author of four books and many articles published in sociology, law, criminology, and gender journals. Her work on prostitution, hate crime, prison violence, transgender prisoners, and prison grievance systems has been honoured with awards from half a dozen professional organisations and informed public policy, and she has received national recognition for teaching and mentoring. She has served as President of the American Society of Criminology, the Society for the Study of Social Problems, and the Pacific Sociological Association.
Summary
Bringing together cutting edge and diverse research from international and interdisciplinary perspectives, this book initiates and shapes conversations about transgender people within the criminal justice system.