No Justice, No Resilience: Prison Abolition As Disaster Mitigation in an Era of Climate Change

被引:21
作者
Purdum, Carlee [1 ]
Henry, Felicia [2 ]
Rucker, Sloan [3 ,4 ]
Williams, Darien Alexander [5 ]
Thomas, Richard [6 ]
Dixon, Benika [7 ]
Jacobs, Fayola [8 ]
机构
[1] Texas A&M Univ, Hazard Reduct & Recovery Ctr, Dept Landscape Architecture & Urban Planning, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[2] Univ Delaware, Dept Sociol & Criminal Justice, Newark, DE USA
[3] Univ Houston, Fight Tox Prisons, Houston, TX USA
[4] Univ Houston, Dept Sociol, Houston, TX USA
[5] MIT, Dept Urban Studies & Planning, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
[6] Fight Tox Prisons, Fight Tox Prisons Southwest, Ft Worth, TX USA
[7] Texas A&M Univ, Dept Epidemiol & Biostat, College Stn, TX 77843 USA
[8] Univ Minnesota, Humphrey Sch Publ Affairs, Minneapolis, MN USA
关键词
disaster; abolition; prison labor; emergency management; vulnerability; racism; INCARCERATION;
D O I
10.1089/env.2021.0020
中图分类号
X [环境科学、安全科学];
学科分类号
08 ; 0830 ;
摘要
Disasters are becoming more frequent and destructive while the consequences for incarcerated persons have grown increasingly visible. Simultaneously, scholars, individuals, and communities are grappling with police brutality and systemic anti-Black racism in the criminal legal system by engaging with the concept of abolition. In this article we demonstrate that these issues are not disconnected and argue that the abolition of the prison industrial complex (PIC) would mitigate the impacts of disasters for incarcerated persons and their communities. Incarceration undermines individual and collective resilience needed to recover from disasters, whereas carceral infrastructure facilitates disaster harm to incarcerated persons and their communities. Incarceration itself mirrors the harm and destruction of a disaster. Abolition of the PIC would not only prevent harm from incarceration, but also systems of accountability put in place by communities as suggested by abolitionists would contribute to the resilience of individuals and communities. By examining these connections, we provide a framework for considerations of abolition in an era of reckoning with anti-Blackness, the violence of the criminal legal system, and climate change, and suggest further investment of research in these areas.
引用
收藏
页码:418 / 425
页数:8
相关论文
共 64 条
[1]  
8toAbolition, 2020, 8 AB AB POL CHANG DE
[2]  
Abrams LR, 2022, AGEING SOC, V42, P1213, DOI [10.1017/S0144686X20001531, 10.1017/s0144686x20001531]
[3]  
ACLU, 2006, PRISON LEGAL NEWS
[4]   Social Capital and Community Resilience [J].
Aldrich, Daniel P. ;
Meyer, Michelle A. .
AMERICAN BEHAVIORAL SCIENTIST, 2015, 59 (02) :254-269
[5]   Racial disparities in pollution exposure and employment at US industrial facilities [J].
Ash, Michael ;
Boyce, James K. .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2018, 115 (42) :10636-10641
[6]  
Auerbach A.J., 2006, PUBLIC POLICY INCOME
[7]  
Baptiste Nathalie, 2017, MOTHER JONES BLOG
[8]   Tombstone Towns and Toxic Prisons: Prison Ecology and the Necessity of an Anti-prison Environmental Movement [J].
Bradshaw, Elizabeth A. .
CRITICAL CRIMINOLOGY, 2018, 26 (03) :407-422
[9]  
Brand D, 2020, Queens Daily Eagle
[10]  
Bronson J., 2019, PRISONERS 2017, V500, P400