Punishment in Disguise: Penal Governance and Federal Imprisonment of Women in Canada

Front Cover
University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2001 - Social Science - 250 pages

In "Punishment in Disguise", Kelly Hannah-Moffat presents a look at some current forms of penal governance in Canadian federal women's prisons. Hannah-Moffat uses women's imprisonment to theorize the complexity of penal power and to show how the meaning and content of women's penal governance changes over time, how penal reform strategies intersect and evolve into complex patterns of governing, how governing is always gendered and racialized, and how expert, non-expert, and hybrid forms of power and knowledge inform penal strategies.

The author posits that although there has been a series of distinct phases in the imprisonment of women, the prison system itself, given its primary functions of custody and punishment, is consistent in thwarting attempts at progressive reform. While each distinct phase has its own corresponding ideology and discourse, the individual discourses have internal complexities and contradictions, which have not been adequately recognized in the general literature on penology.

Avoiding universal and reductionist claims about women's oppression, Hannah-Moffat argues that relations of power are complex and fractured and that there is a need to explore the specific elements of institutional power relations. Backed by solid research, "Punishment in Disguise" makes a strong contribution to criminology and feminist theory by providing an alternative approach to analysing the governance of women by other women and by the state.

 

Contents

Introduction
3
Maternal Discipline and Pastoral Power
19
The Development of Separate
45
The Andrew Mercer Reformatory and the Reformatory Ideal
56
Maternal Success or Failure?
66
The Female Unit at Kingston
72
The Nickle
83
Womens Prison Reform 194570 2 2 220
92
Feminist Reformers and
132
Neoliberal Governance
162
Stumbling Blocks Growing Pains
188
Notes
201
References
223
Conclusions
224
90
247
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2001)

Kelly Hannah-Moffat is Assistant Professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of Toronto.

Bibliographic information