Prisons, jails, immigrant detention centers. We know them as places of unfreedom, but we don’t often think about them as places of work. Yet compulsory labor is a key part of incarceration in this country. Sociologist Erin Hatton discusses the state of coerced work in prisons, the lack of worker protections, and how work has been used as a way of dampening prisoner activism. (Encore presentation.)
Resources:
Erin Hatton (ed.), Labor and Punishment: Work In and Out of Prison UC Press, 2021
photo: Hasan Almasi via Unsplash
The post Work In and Out of Prison appeared first on KPFA.
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