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Punishment in Latin America: Explorations from the Margins [Kõva köide]

Edited by (National University of Litoral, Argentina), Edited by (University of Oxford, UK)
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Challenging the Northern-centric approach that has dominated the literature on punishment-and-society, this collection draws on innovative theoretical perspectives to make sense of punishment, penal trends, institutions and practices in peripheral settings, taking Latin American countries as its case studies.



Challenging the Northern-centric approach that has dominated the literature on punishment-and-society, Punishment in Latin America draws on innovative theoretical perspectives to make sense of punishment, penal trends, institutions and practices in peripheral settings, taking Latin American countries as its case studies.

Engaging with both historical trajectories and recent theoretical perspectives, contributors examine different aspects and dimensions of punishment and prison, identifying specific dynamics and features in a truly South-South conversation. Taking part in contemporary movements to decolonize, southernize and democratize criminology, the chapters focus on in-depth case studies covering Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Uruguay and Venezuela, as well as wider, comparative analyses that go beyond country-specific contexts. Placing a critical emphasis on the insufficiency of Northern concepts and arguments to make sense of punishment within Latin America, the authors engage with these theories while at the same time avoiding a sense of subordination or dependency disconnected from their own contexts.

Bringing together researchers working across Latin American, European and North American universities, this collection advances the southernization and decolonization of this field of knowledge.

Introduction. Punishment in Latin America: Explorations from the
Margins; Luiz Dal Santo and Máximo Sozzo

Section One. Penal Trajectories

Chapter
1. From Senzalas to Dungeons: The Constitution of the Penitentiary
System in Brazil; André R. Giamberardino

Chapter
2. Punitive Turn or Punitive Imperialism? Analyzing the
Transformation in the Ecuadorian Penal Real; Martha Vargas Aguirre

Chapter
3. Criminal Justice Reform, Americanization, and Conviction without
Trial in Argentina; Máximo Sozzo

Section Two. Prison Order and Prison Life

Chapter
4. Contemporary Prison Management in Chile: Disputes about Order;
Olga Espinoza M.

Chapter
5. In/Out: Revisiting the Relationships between Prisons and Slums in
Latin America; Andres Antillano

Chapter
6. The Arrival of the Risk Paradigm to Prison Management in Uruguay;
Ana Vigna and Santiago Sosa Barón

Chapter
7. The Incas Two Bodies: The Prison Condition in Latin America;
Libardo José Ariza and Fernando León Tamayo Arboleda

Section Three. Theoretical Exchanges

Chapter
8. Actuarial and Managerial Justice: Theoretical and Empirical
Impacts on Latin-American Criminological Realm; Mariano Sicardi and Claudio
González Guarda

Chapter
9. Is Vigilantism an Extralegal Phenomenon?; Diego Tuesta

Chapter
10. Southern Green Victimology: A Look at the Cycle of Environmental
Harms, Resistance and Over-Criminalization; Valeria Vegh Weis
Luiz Dal Santo is a DPhil candidate at the Oxford Centre for Criminology and a Tutor in Criminology at Hertford College and St Catherines College. He also teaches in graduate programmes in criminology and law in Brazil.



Máximo Sozzo is Professor of Sociology of Law and Criminology at the National University of Litoral, Argentina, and Leverhulme Visiting Professor at the School of Law, University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.