Gender, Geography, and
Punishment:
The Experience of Women
in Carceral Russia
by Judith Pallot (Author), Laura Piacentini (Author)
This book is the first
of its kind that brings together human geography and the sociology of
punishment to explore the relationship between distance and punishment in
con-temporary Russia. Using established penological and geographical theories,
the book presents in-depth empirical research to show how the experiences of
women prisoners are shaped by the distances that the Russian penal service
sends prisoners to serve their sentences. Its most eye-catching feature is its
use of interviews conducted by the authors and their research team with adult
and juvenile women prisoners, ex-prisoners and prison officers in penal
facilities in different regions of the Russian Federation between 2006 and
2010. It includes discussion of the impact of Russia's distinctive penal
geography on pris-oners' family relationships, how women prisoners' sense of
place and gender identities are shaped and re-shaped on their journey from
pre-trial facility to 'correction colony' to release, and the social
hierarchies, relationships and practices that characterise Russia's penal
institutions for women. The authors are both experienced researchers in Russia.
The book brings together their complementary disciplinary expertise in the
development of the concept of 'coerced mobilization' to explore Russia's
punishment culture. The book argues that Russia's inherited geography of
penality, combined with traditional ideas about women's role that shape the
penal service's management of women prisoners, add to their 'pains of
imprisonment'. Crucially, the authors show how these factors are con-straining
the Russian penal service's ability to implement successive reforms aimed at
humanizing Russia's notoriously tough prisons. Russian imprisonment as it
relates to women is, they believe, an area of significant concern for lawmakers
in that country as well as to human rights campaigners, geographers interested
in space and power, and scholars studying the post-Soviet system.