Publications
Author: State Charities Aid Association (N.Y.)
Publisher:
Published: 1885
Total Pages: 696
ISBN-13:
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Author: State Charities Aid Association (N.Y.)
Publisher:
Published: 1885
Total Pages: 696
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: State Charities Aid Association (N.Y.)
Publisher:
Published: 1886
Total Pages: 62
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Clare Anderson
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Published: 2018-05-17
Total Pages: 409
ISBN-13: 135000068X
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBetween 1415, when the Portuguese first used convicts for colonization purposes in the North African enclave of Ceuta, to the 1960s and the dissolution of Stalin's gulags, global powers including the Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese, British, Russians, Chinese and Japanese transported millions of convicts to forts, penal settlements and penal colonies all over the world. A Global History of Convicts and Penal Colonies builds on specific regional archives and literatures to write the first global history of penal transportation. The essays explore the idea of penal transportation as an engine of global change, in which political repression and forced labour combined to produce long-term impacts on economy, society and identity. They investigate the varied and interconnected routes convicts took to penal sites across the world, and the relationship of these convict flows to other forms of punishment, unfree labour, military service and indigenous incarceration. They also explore the lived worlds of convicts, including work, culture, religion and intimacy, and convict experience and agency.
Author: State Charities Aid Association (N.Y.). Library
Publisher:
Published: 1886
Total Pages: 64
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Clare Anderson
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Published: 2022-01-13
Total Pages: 493
ISBN-13: 1108840728
DOWNLOAD EBOOKA new global history perspective on the relationship between convict mobility and governance, nation building, imperial expansion, and knowledge formation.
Author: Milwaukee Public Library
Publisher:
Published: 1885
Total Pages: 1030
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1874
Total Pages: 548
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Nicolas Trübner
Publisher:
Published: 1874
Total Pages: 410
ISBN-13:
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Publisher:
Published: 1874
Total Pages: 840
ISBN-13:
DOWNLOAD EBOOKAuthor: Henry Kamerling
Publisher: University of Virginia Press
Published: 2017-11-28
Total Pages: 360
ISBN-13: 0813940567
DOWNLOAD EBOOKBoth in the popular imagination and in academic discourse, North and South are presented as fundamentally divergent penal systems in the aftermath of the Civil War, a difference mapped onto larger perceived cultural disparities between the two regions. The South’s post Civil War embrace of chain gangs and convict leasing occupies such a prominent position in the nation’s imagination that it has come to represent one of the region’s hallmark differences from the North. The regions are different, the argument goes, because they punish differently. Capital and Convict challenges this assumption by offering a comparative study of Illinois’s and South Carolina’s formal state penal systems in the fifty years after the Civil War. Henry Kamerling argues that although punishment was racially inflected both during Reconstruction and after, shared, nonracial factors defined both states' penal systems throughout this period. The similarities in the lived experiences of inmates in both states suggest that the popular focus on the racial characteristics of southern punishment has shielded us from an examination of important underlying factors that prove just as central—if not more so—in shaping the realities of crime and punishment throughout the United States.