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Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Published

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Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism. / Miller, Esmorie.
2024. Paper presented at 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology, Bucharest, Romania.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Miller, E 2024, 'Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism', Paper presented at 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology, Bucharest, Romania, 11/09/24 - 14/09/24.

APA

Miller, E. (2024). Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism. Paper presented at 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology, Bucharest, Romania.

Vancouver

Miller E. Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism. 2024. Paper presented at 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology, Bucharest, Romania.

Author

Miller, Esmorie. / Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform : A Case for Penal Welfarism. Paper presented at 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology, Bucharest, Romania.

Bibtex

@conference{c53f3b1277e04efa8d451900e8f39590,
title = "Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform: A Case for Penal Welfarism",
abstract = "ABSTRACT: Extant literature lamenting the deepening relationship between race and penalty, in contemporary Britain, defines the race/penalty nexus as the empire coming home (Moore, 2014; Brown, 2002). Correspondingly, scholars of race have doubled down on calls to address race-blindness in British criminological histories (Choak, 2020; Phillips, et al, 2019). A vocabulary of erasure and amnesia indicate both active and passive processes of exclusion from criminological inquiry. Moore and Brown{\textquoteright}s positioning of the amplified penalty being meted out to racialized peoples, in contemporary Britain, as the empire coming home reflects this race-blindness. The paper centres British interwar youth penal reform as a primary site for addressing this race-blindness. Drawing on historical records, including the Fletcher Report, the Liverpool University Settlement Records, and the Eugenics Review catalogue, the paper explores the role of interwar youth reform in shaping a historic politics of race in Britain. Consistent with the deviance invention logic which emphasized earlier modes of penalty for White, working-class youth, early modes of penalty similarly implicated racialized youth and their families, but this remains largely unknown in the criminological canon. In particular, racialization played an especially antithetical role excluding racialized young women from the logics and practice of care recognized as crucial, by the reform movement, for supporting the transformative potential of marginalized urban, working-class youth. Such exploration widens the lens to expose historic intersections between race, gender, and penality in Britain. ",
author = "Esmorie Miller",
year = "2024",
month = aug,
day = "12",
language = "English",
note = "24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology : Criminology goes East ; Conference date: 11-09-2024 Through 14-09-2024",
url = "https://www.eurocrim2024.com/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Race, Gender, and Penalty in Historic Interwar British Youth Penal Reform

T2 - 24th Annual Conference of the European Society of Criminology

AU - Miller, Esmorie

N1 - Conference code: 24th

PY - 2024/8/12

Y1 - 2024/8/12

N2 - ABSTRACT: Extant literature lamenting the deepening relationship between race and penalty, in contemporary Britain, defines the race/penalty nexus as the empire coming home (Moore, 2014; Brown, 2002). Correspondingly, scholars of race have doubled down on calls to address race-blindness in British criminological histories (Choak, 2020; Phillips, et al, 2019). A vocabulary of erasure and amnesia indicate both active and passive processes of exclusion from criminological inquiry. Moore and Brown’s positioning of the amplified penalty being meted out to racialized peoples, in contemporary Britain, as the empire coming home reflects this race-blindness. The paper centres British interwar youth penal reform as a primary site for addressing this race-blindness. Drawing on historical records, including the Fletcher Report, the Liverpool University Settlement Records, and the Eugenics Review catalogue, the paper explores the role of interwar youth reform in shaping a historic politics of race in Britain. Consistent with the deviance invention logic which emphasized earlier modes of penalty for White, working-class youth, early modes of penalty similarly implicated racialized youth and their families, but this remains largely unknown in the criminological canon. In particular, racialization played an especially antithetical role excluding racialized young women from the logics and practice of care recognized as crucial, by the reform movement, for supporting the transformative potential of marginalized urban, working-class youth. Such exploration widens the lens to expose historic intersections between race, gender, and penality in Britain.

AB - ABSTRACT: Extant literature lamenting the deepening relationship between race and penalty, in contemporary Britain, defines the race/penalty nexus as the empire coming home (Moore, 2014; Brown, 2002). Correspondingly, scholars of race have doubled down on calls to address race-blindness in British criminological histories (Choak, 2020; Phillips, et al, 2019). A vocabulary of erasure and amnesia indicate both active and passive processes of exclusion from criminological inquiry. Moore and Brown’s positioning of the amplified penalty being meted out to racialized peoples, in contemporary Britain, as the empire coming home reflects this race-blindness. The paper centres British interwar youth penal reform as a primary site for addressing this race-blindness. Drawing on historical records, including the Fletcher Report, the Liverpool University Settlement Records, and the Eugenics Review catalogue, the paper explores the role of interwar youth reform in shaping a historic politics of race in Britain. Consistent with the deviance invention logic which emphasized earlier modes of penalty for White, working-class youth, early modes of penalty similarly implicated racialized youth and their families, but this remains largely unknown in the criminological canon. In particular, racialization played an especially antithetical role excluding racialized young women from the logics and practice of care recognized as crucial, by the reform movement, for supporting the transformative potential of marginalized urban, working-class youth. Such exploration widens the lens to expose historic intersections between race, gender, and penality in Britain.

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 11 September 2024 through 14 September 2024

ER -