被监禁的团结:与青少年监狱中的有色人种女孩建立真实的关系

Brian Cabral, S. Annamma, Annie Le, Brianna Harvey, Jennifer M. Wilmot, Jamelia Morgan
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景:在公共教育的讨论中,监狱教育经常被忽视。如果算上有色人种,有色人种女孩的数量往往会被更多的有色人种男孩所掩盖。然而,有色人种残疾女孩进入监狱的路线与她们的男性同龄人不同;有色人种的女孩会因为轻微的犯罪行为而被监禁,而且往往会因为违反缓刑规定而再次入狱,这意味着她们会因为最初的犯罪行为而受到更严厉的惩罚。尽管监狱教育提供了教育机会,比如获得文凭或普通教育文凭的机会,但人们发现,大多数教育都是补救性的,与被监禁的有色人种残疾女孩的生活无关。研究重点:在这篇文章中,我们揭示了监狱教育课堂中有色人种残疾女孩团结的复杂性和细微差别。运用残疾批判种族理论(DisCrit)团结的视角,在分析一门社会批判扫盲课程的同时,实证研究的问题是:在青少年监狱中,DisCrit团结有色人种残疾女孩的优势和限制是什么?研究设计:我们的定性研究在美国中西部一所最高安全级别的青少年监狱进行。这项研究是一项为期一年的大型项目的一部分,该项目包括16名被监禁的残疾女孩,其中大部分是有色人种女孩,她们参加了由首席研究员和教学团队设计和教授的一门有学分的社会批判素养课程。我们的完整数据库包括对青少年监狱中的女孩(23人)和成年人(6人)的访谈,课堂观察(25人),教育旅程地图(10人),焦点小组(4人),实地笔记(20人)和课堂文物(21人)。本研究的数据集中于对女生的访谈、观察、实地记录和课堂材料。结论/建议:我们的分析说明了监狱教室中有色人种残疾女孩团结的便利和限制。这些启示包括女孩们认为是团结的具体行动,需要团结才能使批判性教学法和课程产生影响,以及女孩们描述的这些启示的效果。在青少年监狱中,铅笔等学习工具被视为武器,我们发现两个制约因素限制了DisCrit Solidarity的努力:支持与团结的混淆以及青少年监狱的暴力背景。最后,我们暗示我们的团结努力受到了限制。为了超越狭隘的团结努力,我们建议从废奴主义的地理角度出发,考虑导致与被监禁的残疾有色人种女孩持续团结的多尺度过程。致谢:我们要感谢Marilyn Ortega和William Proffitt在这个项目的教学团队和数据收集中所扮演的角色。我们也感谢本期特刊的编辑大卫·康纳和贝丝·费里,感谢他们的远见卓识和对我们工作的包容,感谢审稿人的反馈大大加强了我们的工作。最后,首席研究员要感谢福特基金会和美国国家科学院、工程院和医学院,他们通过福特博士后奖学金使这项研究成为可能。
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Solidarity Incarcerated: Building Authentic Relationships With Girls of Color in Youth Prisons
Context: Prison education has often been ignored in discussions of public education. When it has been included, Girls of Color are often eclipsed by larger populations of Boys of Color. Yet the routes disabled Girls of Color take to prisons are different from those of their male peers; Girls of Color become incarcerated for low-level offenses and often end up back in prison due to probation violations, meaning they have been punished more severely for original crimes. Although prison education has offered educational opportunities, such as the chance to get a diploma or GED, most of it has been found to be remedial and irrelevant to the lives of incarcerated disabled Girls of Color. Focus of Study: In this article, we unraveled the complexities and nuances of solidarity within prison education classrooms with disabled Girls of Color. Using a disability critical race theory (DisCrit) Solidarity lens while analyzing a sociocritical literacy course, the empirical research question was: What are the affordances and constraints of DisCrit Solidarity with disabled Girls of Color in a youth prison? Research Design: Our qualitative study took place in a maximum-security youth prison in the Midwestern part of the United States. This study was part of a larger one-year project that included 16 incarcerated disabled girls, mostly Girls of Color, who enrolled in a credit-bearing sociocritical literacy course designed and taught by the principal investigator and teaching team. Our full corpus of data included interviews with the girls (23) and adults in the youth prison (6), classroom observations (25), education journey maps (10), focus groups (4), fieldnotes (20), and classroom artifacts (21). Data for this study focused on the interviews with the girls, observations, fieldnotes, and class materials. Conclusions/Recommendations: Our analysis illustrated the affordances and constraints of solidarity in prison classrooms with incarcerated disabled Girls of Color. The affordances included tangible moves that the girls identified as solidarity, the need for solidarity to make critical pedagogy and curriculum impactful, and the effect of those affordances that the girls described. In youth prisons where tools of learning, such as pencils, were considered weapons, we found two constraints that limited DisCrit Solidarity efforts: the conflation of support with solidarity and the violent context of youth prisons. We conclude with the implication that our solidarity efforts were incarcerated. To move beyond narrowly focused solidarity efforts, we suggest growing out abolitionist geography to consider the multiscalar processes that lead to sustained solidarities with incarcerated disabled Girls of Color. Acknowledgements: We would like to thank Marilyn Ortega and William Proffitt for their roles in both the pedagogical team and data collection on this project. We also appreciate the editors of this special issue, David Connor and Beth Ferri, for their vision and inclusion of our work and the reviewers whose feedback strengthened our work substantially. Finally, the principal investigator would like to thank the Ford Foundation and the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, which made this research possible through the Ford Postdoctoral Fellowship.
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