2022
DOI: 10.1007/s10460-022-10346-x
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Prison agriculture in the United States: racial capitalism and the disciplinary matrix of exploitation and rehabilitation

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Cited by 10 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Several scholars have noted similar tensions and contradictions within carceral food systems and spaces. In Chennault and Sbicca's (2023) critical review of prison agriculture in the United States, they develop what they term a disciplinary matrix, to highlight the diverse and at times competing rationales that drive these activities, oscillating between forms of discipline, exploitation and rehabilitation. In Hazelett's (2023) exploration of the possibilities for carceral food justice within prison garden programs, he concludes that prison gardens represent a duality (perhaps a paradox even) in that they are fundamentally reformist in nature, but also offer moments of resistance and possibility to work towards carceral food justice.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several scholars have noted similar tensions and contradictions within carceral food systems and spaces. In Chennault and Sbicca's (2023) critical review of prison agriculture in the United States, they develop what they term a disciplinary matrix, to highlight the diverse and at times competing rationales that drive these activities, oscillating between forms of discipline, exploitation and rehabilitation. In Hazelett's (2023) exploration of the possibilities for carceral food justice within prison garden programs, he concludes that prison gardens represent a duality (perhaps a paradox even) in that they are fundamentally reformist in nature, but also offer moments of resistance and possibility to work towards carceral food justice.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Beyond thermal issues with infrastructure in carceral space, incarcerated populations are increasingly leased as farm labor in the United States as labor shortages in agriculture result from anti-immigrant policies (Rice 2019). Chennault and Sbicca (2023, 180) identify “662 state-operated adult prisons with agricultural activities” in the United States, with the American South having “the highest percentage of prisons with these assignments.” The result is an instance—alongside those outlined above in flooding and wildfires—where the thermal inequity of carceral space overlaps with the thermal inequity of occupational thermal safety. In carceral spaces already replete with co-produced racial, economic, and gender disparities, prison agricultural labor exposes inmates to the possibility of additional thermal extremes through the indifference of capitalist food systems.…”
Section: Atmospheric and Climatic Inequitiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…How prison farm labor is presented matters, in part, because it is still practiced at many carceral institutions; there are some seven hundred state prisons across the country that maintain work sites engaged in the production of plants, food, and animal husbandry. 23 Approving stories on prison agricultural labor are also not just feel-good stories of little consequence. Such stories, which rely on the cooperation of corrections officials for access to prisons and incarcerated people, reassure the public about U.S. carceral conditions.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%