
Population Control
Description
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Population Control explores the relational conditions that give rise to institutional violence - whether in residential schools, internment camps, or correctional or psychiatric facilities. This violence is not dependent on any particular space, but on underlying patterns of institutionalization that can spill over into community settings even as Canada closes many of its large-scale facilities. Contributors to the collection argue that there is a logic across community settings that claim to provide care for unruly populations: a logic of institutional violence, which involves a deep entanglement of both loathing and care. This loathing signals a devaluation of the institutionalized and leaves certain populations vulnerable to state intervention under the guise of care. When that offer of care is polluted by loathing, however, there comes along with it an unavoidable and socially prescribed violence.
Offering a series of case studies in the Canadian context - from historical asylums and laundries for "fallen women" to contemporary prisons, group homes, and emergency shelters - Population Control understands institutional violence as a unique and predictable social phenomenon, and makes inroads toward preventing its reoccurrence.
Reviews / Votes
"In bringing together diversely situated experts on institutional violence from across Canada, Population Control offers a serious advance in state-of-the-art research relating to endemic institutional violence in Canada. This collection significantly helps us recognize how care and loathing function across different spatial and temporal locations to structure our social and political responses to unruly populations, not only to advance scholarly knowledge but also to support the afterlives of those who have been institutionalized and provide urgently needed evidence against insidious forms of trans-institutional violence that persists beyond the closure of total institutions." Kelly Fritsch, Carleton University and co-editor of Disability Injustice: Confronting Criminalization in Canada "[Population Control] ... has a wide methodological scope, ethnographic and ethical density, and a palpable sense of care for its institutionalized subjects, providing widely applicable lessons on how to research, articulate and challenge institutional violence. These stories need to be heard." Medicine, Conflict, SurvivalMore details
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Persons
Kate Rossiter is associate professor in health studies at Wilfrid Laurier University.
Content
- Cover
- Copyright
- Contents
- Introduction
- Section One Roots of Total Institutional Violence
- 1 Making Sense of Institutional Violence through Social Theory: An Autoethnography of Adolescent Trauma and Survival
- 2 "Spectacles of Humiliation": Symbolic Violence and the Regulation of Good Shepherd Inmates
- 3 Manufacturing Structural Vulnerability and Institutional Violence: The Language of Childhood and Disability
- 4 The Societal Underpinnings of Institutionalizing Othered Bodies: A Typology of Institutional Violence at the Huronia Regional Centre and the Mohawk Institute
- Section Two Loathing in the TransInstitutional Era
- 5 Invisible Institutions: Institutionalization of People Labelled with Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities
- 6 The Violence of Work: Sheltered Workshops in Ontario, Canada
- 7 Institutionalizing Unfree Labour in Ontario's Seasonal Agricultural Worker Program Farmsteads
- 8 Danger, Safety, and the Rhetoric of Urban Crisis: Institutional Logics and Windsor's Downtown Core
- Section Three Care Qua Violence
- 9 Gendered and Disability Violence, Uninterrupted: Law's Formulation of and Complicity in Violence against Women Labelled with Intellectual Disability in Community-Based Institutional Settings
- 10 The List as Deterrent for "Others"
- 11 We Want You to Listen: The Shelter Video Project Collective on Colonial/Capitalist Violence
- 12 Kaleidoscope: Hope in Action beyond Institution
- Index
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