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"In Carceral Citizens, anthropologist Caroline Parker offers an ethnographic portrait of faith-based therapeutic communities in Puerto Rico. A joint product of the carceral state and the non-profit sector, these communities serve as reeducation and recovery centers for mostly male non-violent drug offenders who serve out their sentences engaged in manual labor and prayer. The most surprising aspect of these centers, however, is that their "graduates" often stay there even long after the completion of their sentences, working as self-appointed counselors in a mixture of volunteer and low-wage…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
"In Carceral Citizens, anthropologist Caroline Parker offers an ethnographic portrait of faith-based therapeutic communities in Puerto Rico. A joint product of the carceral state and the non-profit sector, these communities serve as reeducation and recovery centers for mostly male non-violent drug offenders who serve out their sentences engaged in manual labor and prayer. The most surprising aspect of these centers, however, is that their "graduates" often stay there even long after the completion of their sentences, working as self-appointed counselors in a mixture of volunteer and low-wage positions. Parker seeks to explain this curious fact by showing how, in these therapeutic communities, criminalized men find ways of carving out a meaningful existence. Through their participation in the day-to-day functioning of the centers, they discover and cultivate fulfilling alternative forms of belonging, livelihood, and citizenship, despite living within the restrictions of the carceral state. Situating her study against the backdrop of Puerto Rico's colonial history, Parker aims to challenge common assumptions about confinement, labor, rehabilitation, and social life"--
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Autorenporträt
Caroline M. Parker is a lecturer in anthropology at University College London.