Part I Violated: Children’s Rights are Human Rights
2 Self-Isolation May Feel Like Jail: It’s Nothing Compared to Youth Prison
3 Children and Young People in Custody in England and Wales: Rights and Wrongs
4 Everyday Violence in El Redentor Specialized Care Center in Bogotá, Colombia
5 Doing Time: Young People and the Rhetoric of Juvenile Justice in Ghana
Part II Socio-Legal Contexts of Youth Imprisonment
6 The Rebirth of Delinquent ‘Adult-Children’: Criminal Capacity, Socio-economic Systems, and the Malleability of Penality of Child Delinquency in India
7 Juvenile Deprivation of Liberty in Brazil: Discretion, Expansion and Deterioration
8 “I Wanna Be Somebody by the Time I Turn 25”: Narratives of Pathways into Crime and Reentry Expectations Among Young Men in Germany and the United States
Part III Regulating Emotions and Relationships Behind Bars
9 State Property
10 Boredom: A Key Experience of Youth Imprisonment
11 Friendship in the Juvenile Correctional Institution
12 Juvenile Facility Staff: Research, Policy, and Practice
Part IV Gendering Justice
13 Straight and Narrow: Girls, Sexualities, and the Youth Justice System
14 “This Place Saved My Life”: The Limits of Christian Redemption Narratives at a Juvenile Detention Facility for Girls
15 Horizontal Surveillance and Therapeutic Governance of Institutionalized Girls
16 ‘Hypermasculinity’ in Interaction: Affective Practices, Resistance and Vulnerability in a Swedish Youth Prison
17 Incarcerated Young Men and Boys: Trauma, Masculinity and the Need for Trauma-Informed, Gender-Sensitive Correctional Care
Part V Coming Home: Life After Youth Imprisonment
18 The Expectations and Challenges of Youth Reentry
19 Nothing’s Changed but Me: Reintegration Plans Meet the Inner City
20 Young Women and Desistance: Finding a Net to Fall Back On
Part VI Young Adulthood and Long-Term Confinement
21 My Shame
22 The Pains of Life Imprisonment During Late Adolescence and Emerging Adulthood
23 Surviving Life: How Youth Adapt to Life Sentences in Adult Prisons 24 Experiencing the Death Penalty as a Child in Malawi: The Story of Henry Dickson
Part VII Abolition and the Future of Youth Justice
25 The Pitfalls of Separating Youth in Prison: A Critique of Age-Segregated Incarceration
26 Toward Transformation: The Youth Justice Movement in the United States on Ending the Youth Prison Model
27 Critical Reflections on Education for Children in Youth Justice Custody
28 Transforming Youth Justice Inside and Out
Alexandra Cox is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Essex, UK. She previously served as Assistant Professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz in their Department of Sociology.
Laura S. Abrams is Chair and Professor of Social Welfare at UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, USA. Her scholarship focuses on improving the well-being of youth and young adults with histories of incarceration.
This handbook brings together the knowledge on juvenile imprisonment to develop a global, synthesized view of the impact of imprisonment on children and young people. There are a growing number of scholars around the world who have conducted in-depth, qualitative research inside of youth prisons, and about young people incarcerated in adult prisons, and yet this research has never been synthesized or compiled. This book is organized around several core themes including: conditions of confinement, relationships in confinement, gender/sexuality and identity, perspectives on juvenile facility staff, reentry from youth prisons, young people’s experiences in adult prisons, and new models and perspectives on juvenile imprisonment. This handbook seeks to educate students, scholars, and policymakers about the role of incarceration in young people’s lives, from an empirically-informed, critical, and global perspective.
Alexandra Cox is Senior Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Essex, UK. She previously served as Assistant Professor at the State University of New York at New Paltz in their Department of Sociology.
Laura S. Abrams is Chair and Professor of Social Welfare at UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs, USA. Her scholarship focuses on improving the well-being of youth and young adults with histories of incarceration.