Locked up, coerced, removed: space as an instrument of separation and social control in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries

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  • 20.500.13089/13p1n
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info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1663-4837

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info:eu-repo/semantics/reference/issn/1422-0857

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Francesca Brunet, « Locked up, coerced, removed: space as an instrument of separation and social control in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries », Crime, Histoire & Sociétés


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There has recently been a renewed interest in the history of prisons and, more broadly, places and facilities designed to isolate criminals, “deviants” and misfits, the sick, the “insane” from society. New paradigms and prisms have emerged through which to understand the very concept of “places of custody” (Orte der Verwahrung). On the one hand, this revived interest has sharpened an earlier focus on the coercive aspects of confinement (typified by research in the 1970s on “total institutions”)....

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