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Carceral geography has yet to define the ‘carceral’, with implications for its own development, its potential synergies within and beyond geography, and effective critique of the carceral ‘turn’. A range of explicatory alternatives are open, including continued expansive engagement with the carceral, and attendance to compact and diffuse carceral models. We trace the origins of the term ‘carceral’, its expansive definition after Foucault, the apparent carceral/prison symbiosis, and the extant diversity of carceral geography. We advance for debate, as a step towards its critical appraisal, a series of ‘carceral conditions’ that bear on the nature and quality of carcerality.
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Dominique Moran
Jennifer Turner
Anna Schliehe
Progress in Human Geography
University of Cambridge
University of Birmingham
University of Liverpool
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Moran et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a03af47d2f86d5a82f01790 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1177/0309132517710352