Peacock Marian, Turner Mary, Varey Sandra
Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.
Lancaster University, UK.
Sociology. 2018 Dec;52(6):1152-1168. doi: 10.1177/0038038517695060. Epub 2017 Apr 7.
The UK prison population has doubled in the last decade, with the greatest increases among prisoners over the age of 60 years, many of whom are sex offenders imprisoned late in life for 'historical' offences. Occurring in a context of 'austerity' and the wider neoliberal project, an under-researched consequence of this increase has been the rising numbers of 'anticipated' prison deaths; that is, deaths that are foreseeable and that require end of life care. We focus here on 'jail craft'; a nostalgic, multi-layered, narrative or discourse, and set of tacit practices which are drawn on by officers to manage the affective and practical challenges of working with the demands of this changed prison environment. Utilising findings from an empirical study of end of life care in prisons, we propose that the erosion of jail craft depletes protective resources and sharpens the practical consequences of neoliberal penal policies.
在过去十年中,英国监狱人口翻了一番,60岁以上囚犯的增长幅度最大,其中许多是因“历史”罪行在晚年入狱的性犯罪者。在“紧缩”和更广泛的新自由主义计划背景下,这一增长带来的一个研究不足的后果是“预期”监狱死亡人数的上升;也就是说,那些可预见且需要临终关怀的死亡。我们在此关注“监狱技艺”;一种怀旧的、多层次的叙事或话语,以及一套隐性做法,狱警们利用这些来应对在这个变化了的监狱环境中工作所面临的情感和实际挑战。利用对监狱临终关怀的实证研究结果,我们认为监狱技艺的侵蚀耗尽了保护资源,并加剧了新自由主义刑罚政策的实际后果。