Artigo Revisado por pares

Introduction: Sexuality, Criminalization, and Social Control

2010; Volume: 37; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

2327-641X

Autores

Clare Sears,

Tópico(s)

Psychopathy, Forensic Psychiatry, Sexual Offending

Resumo

THIS SPECIAL ISSUE OF SOCIAL JUSTICE EXAMINES THE SEXUAL POLITICS OF criminalization within and beyond United States. Over past three decades, United States has increasingly relied on criminalization as a strategy for managing social problems. As a result, over 2.3 million people, or one in every 100 adults, are presently incarcerated, excluding those held in immigration detention, juvenile justice, or military facilities (Warren, 2008). Additionally, in post-September 11 political context, new technologies of surveillance and detention have emerged, resulting in criminalization and deportation of thousands of immigrants from United States, and indefinite detention and abuse of prisoners of war around globe. Scholars have critically considered race in their studies of criminalization, examining severe and disproportionate effects on low-income communities and communities of color (Alexander, 2010; Wacquant, 2001; Western, 2007). They have also analyzed gendered dynamics of incarceration, as men are more likely to be locked up than women are, but female prison population has grown at a much faster rate (Chesney-Lind, 2002; Kim, 2003; Richie, 2002; 1996). This special issue builds upon this scholarship, by investigating multiple relationships between sexuality, criminalization, and social control. Several articles here focus on ways in which correctional facilities are deeply implicated in management of sexuality, as total institutions that fundamentally control and coerce inmates' bodies. This is made apparent through institutional policies that regulate sexual relationships, carceral environments that facilitate sexual abuse, routine practices that scrutinize and sexualize inmates' bodies, and court rulings that refuse claims for healthcare by transgender inmates' on security grounds. These articles also highlight how cultural notions of normative sexuality shape contemporary constructions of the criminal, who threatens social and moral order and hence requires incapacitation. This conjures up hypersexual, hypermasculine black man, sexually promiscuous delinquent girl, and homophobic Muslim migrant. Also in this special issue are explorations of sexuality and policing outside correctional facilities, focusing on anti-prostitution and immigration laws in United States and hate crime laws in Germany. The first set of essays explores how criminal justice system manages sexuality within adult and juvenile detention facilities in United States. We begin with Lisa Pasko's article Setting Record 'Straight': Girls, Sexuality, and Juvenile Correctional System, which examines ways in which juvenile justice system regulates girls' same-sex sexual behavior within residential correctional facilities. Based on interviews with 55 juvenile justice professionals in Western United States, Pasko argues that staff respond to girls' same-sex sexuality in three ways: as a psychiatric pathology that results from a history of sexual abuse; as a temporary phenomena that stems from institutional experience rather than from a valid lesbian, bisexual, or queer identity; and as a criminal offense that violates institutional no touching policies and leads to arrest and adjudication. According to Pasko, criminalization response is a relatively new development that emerged in context of 2003 Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA). Although PREA addresses a clear and pressing problem (sexual violence in prison), observers have criticized its primary focus on violent rape between male prisoners and its relative neglect of staff sexual abuse, complexities of sexual coercion, and structural violence within prison environment (Ristroph, 2006; Smith, 2008). Pasko extends this critique by showing that PREA has also effectively criminalized same-sex sexual activity between institutionalized girls, illuminating the capillary power of adult male prison system to spread its policies to lower institutions of social control. …

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