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Conviviality and Survival

Co-Producing Brazilian Prison Order
BookPaperback
Ranking67783inRecht
CHF126.00

Description

Brazilian authorities continuously fail to comply with international norms on minimal conditions of incarceration. Brazil's prison population has risen ten-fold since the country's return to democracy in the 1980s. Its prisons typically operate at double official capacity and with 100 prisoners for each guard on duty. At the same time, however, the average Brazilian prison is not as disorderly or its staff-inmate relations so conflictual as our established theories on prison life might predict. This monograph explores the means by which Brazilian prisons function in the absence of guards. More specifically, the means by which prison security and inmate discipline is negotiated between prison managers, gangs and the wider inmate body. While fragile and varied, this historical tradition of co-produced governance has for decades kept most prisons in better order and enabled most prisoners to better survive.
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Details

ISBN/GTIN978-3-030-06385-6
Product TypeBook
BindingPaperback
Publishing date25/01/2019
EditionSoftcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2018
Pages368 pages
LanguageEnglish
SizeWidth 148 mm, Height 210 mm, Thickness 20 mm
Weight476 g
Article no.21778754
CatalogsBuchzentrum
Data source no.31851359
Product groupRecht
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Author

Sacha Darke is Lecturer in Criminology at University of Westminster, UK, and Visiting Lecturer at University of São Paulo. Sacha has authored and edited a number of articles, books and special journal editions on Brazilian and Latin American prison ethnographies. He is a founding member of British Convict Criminology.