2021
DOI: 10.33137/tijih.v1i2.36134
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Transformative Community: Gathering the Untold Stories of Collaborative Research and Community Re-integration for Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples, Post-Incarceration and Beyond

Abstract: The Canadian carceral system is purposefully designed to disconnect and isolate people.  Ongoing colonialism in Canada at the intersection of carceral, social service, health and child welfare systems has resulted in the disproportionate and unjust representation of Indigenous Peoples across each stage of the penal process. Given the ongoing silencing of people who are or have been incarcerated, Participatory Action Research led by Peers with living experience of the carceral state and grounded in the wisdom o… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(1 citation statement)
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“…The DTES, where much of this housing stock is located, shares characteristics with and a high concentration of direct connections to the carceral system. The DTES has an intensive presence of parole and probation infrastructure (Crier et al 2021), as well as a high concentration of police who share a plurality of relationships with healthcare services; and supportive housing is central to this machinery. "Spatial conditions of release" from incarceration to highly criminalized and regulated spaces, such as the DTES and specifically supportive housing sites, means that individuals, once criminalized, are under intensive surveillance post-release, and they have a myriad of behavioral conditions tied to their discharge, including red zones (area restrictions) (Sylvestre et al 2020, p. 140;Sylvestre et al 2017).…”
Section: Housingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The DTES, where much of this housing stock is located, shares characteristics with and a high concentration of direct connections to the carceral system. The DTES has an intensive presence of parole and probation infrastructure (Crier et al 2021), as well as a high concentration of police who share a plurality of relationships with healthcare services; and supportive housing is central to this machinery. "Spatial conditions of release" from incarceration to highly criminalized and regulated spaces, such as the DTES and specifically supportive housing sites, means that individuals, once criminalized, are under intensive surveillance post-release, and they have a myriad of behavioral conditions tied to their discharge, including red zones (area restrictions) (Sylvestre et al 2020, p. 140;Sylvestre et al 2017).…”
Section: Housingmentioning
confidence: 99%