Trans-incarceration: Reimagining confinement and the criminality of aging.


Journal

Journal of aging studies
ISSN: 1879-193X
Titre abrégé: J Aging Stud
Pays: England
ID NLM: 8916517

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Jun 2020
Historique:
received: 26 03 2020
revised: 13 05 2020
accepted: 13 05 2020
entrez: 4 6 2020
pubmed: 4 6 2020
medline: 12 2 2021
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

As the U.S. population continues to age and will require increasing levels of care, scholars continue to question what conventional methods of "custodial care" and rehabilitation accomplish for the individuals receiving them, relative to those providing them. To this end, critical discourse surrounding the spatial institutionalization of older adults argues that formal institutions of care and rehabilitation are simply alternative and synonymous forms of incarceration and imprisonment. Using semi-structured interviews with ten male residents of a Rhode Island nursing home and ten incarcerated males at the Rhode Island state prison's medium security unit, this work explores the following questions within the existing scholarship of the medical sociology of confinement and incarceration: In what ways are experiences of confinement alike for older adults living in prisons and for those living in nursing homes, and what do these similarities/differences imply about aging, disabled, and economically unproductive bodies as "deviant" and subsequently "criminal" as the traditional definition of the carceral space expands? Participant responses across the nursing home and prison settings fit into three categories, including "home as historical/home as negation," "institution as escape," and "self as non-human/self as non-agent." As a result, there exist thematic consistencies amidst the subjective experiences of older adults across settings of confinement that argue for a shared "criminality" socially assigned to an aging body.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32487341
pii: S0890-4065(20)30024-4
doi: 10.1016/j.jaging.2020.100854
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

100854

Informations de copyright

Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Auteurs

Andreas S Lazaris (AS)

Brown University Alpert Medical School, 222 Richmond St., Providence, RI 02903, USA. Electronic address: andreas_lazaris@brown.edu.

Jennifer Nazareno (J)

Dept. Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, Box, G-S121-5, Providence, RI 02912-G, USA.

Articles similaires

[Redispensing of expensive oral anticancer medicines: a practical application].

Lisanne N van Merendonk, Kübra Akgöl, Bastiaan Nuijen
1.00
Humans Antineoplastic Agents Administration, Oral Drug Costs Counterfeit Drugs

Smoking Cessation and Incident Cardiovascular Disease.

Jun Hwan Cho, Seung Yong Shin, Hoseob Kim et al.
1.00
Humans Male Smoking Cessation Cardiovascular Diseases Female
Humans United States Aged Cross-Sectional Studies Medicare Part C
1.00
Humans Yoga Low Back Pain Female Male

Classifications MeSH