Punitiveness and the criminalisation of the other : State wards, unlawful non-citizens and Indigenous youth


Autoria(s): Carrington, Kerry
Data(s)

2011

Resumo

This paper explores the genealogies of bio-power that cut across punitive state interventions aimed at regulating or normalising several distinctive ‘problem’ or ‘suspect’ deviant populations, such as state wards, non-lawful citizens and Indigenous youth. It begins by making some general comments about the theoretical approach to bio-power taken in this paper. It then outlines the distinctive features of bio-power in Australia and how these intersected with the emergence of penal welfarism to govern the unruly, unchaste, unlawful, and the primitive. The paper draws on three examples to illustrate the argument – the gargantuan criminalisation rates of Aboriginal youth, the history of incarcerating state wards in state institutions, and the mandatory detention of unlawful non-citizens and their children. The construction of Indigenous people as a dangerous presence, alongside the construction of the unruly neglected children of the colony — the larrikin descendants of convicts as necessitating special regimes of internal controls and institutions, found a counterpart in the racial and other exclusionary criteria operating through immigration controls for much of the twentieth century. In each case the problem child or population was expelled from the social body through forms of bio-power, rationalised as strengthening, protecting or purifying the Australian population.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40930/

Publicador

Edinburgh University Press

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40930/1/40930.pdf

DOI:10.3366/soma.2011.0004

Carrington, Kerry (2011) Punitiveness and the criminalisation of the other : State wards, unlawful non-citizens and Indigenous youth. Somatechnics, 1(1), pp. 30-48.

Direitos

Copyright 2011 Edinburgh University Press

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Justice

Palavras-Chave #180110 Criminal Law and Procedure #bio-power, penal welfarism, criminalisation, institutionalisation, Australia
Tipo

Journal Article