The Dictionary of Human Geography

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prisons may also seek to reform inmates to
reduce the possibility of re-offending.
Although confinement is central to all prisons,
incarcerative institutions vary in the types of
offenders they house and the degree of security
that they ensure.
The geographical literature on prisons is
scant, despite the manifold geographical con-
ditions and consequences of practices of incar-
ceration. Imprisonment is essentially a
territorialized form of punishment, a banish-
ment from social life. In this way, it is an
extreme manifestation of the territorialpower
of thestate. Prisons can also be considered in
terms of their own internal geographies, the
ways in which they are constructed to maxi-
mizesurveillanceand control, a process col-
ourfully and famously outlined by Foucault
(1995 [1975]). These geographies, in turn,
structure a particular social order, a ‘society
of captives’ (Sykes, 1958), who adapt to
prison life and its various dangers. Prisons
typically contain different levels of confine-
ment, such that those who are viewed as espe-
cially problematic inmates can be isolated in
solitary conditions. Increasingly, whole insti-
tutions – so-called ‘super maximum security’
(or ‘supermax’) prisons – are dedicated to
housing those violent criminals presumed to
be habitual offenders in conditions of extreme
isolation (Rhodes, 2004).
More macro-oriented analyses see prisons as
reflective of wider social patterns, such as eco-
nomic dynamics. Since 1980, the number of
people imprisoned in the USA has increased by
more than 450 per cent, and Gilmore (1998,
2007) attributes this extraordinary expansion
to the production of disposable or ‘surplus’
populations under the signs of an aggressive
militarismandneo-liberalism. She traces
the formation of an American prison–industrial
complex to state-sponsored prison construc-
tion in declining rural areas and the out-
sourcing andprivatizationof incarceration.
Prison populations can also be analysed in
terms of their demographic characteristics.
That prisons are commonly occupied by poor
people of colour is suggestive of wider patterns
of social differentiation and spatial exclusion:
incarceration can thus be understood as yet
another manifestation of racialized discrimin-
ation (seeracism). The experience of incar-
ceration works to increase these social
divisions further still, because those convicted
of crimes often face significant odds in return-
ing to the economic mainstream. These nega-
tive consequences of incarceration can affect
entire neighbourhoods where ex-convicts

cluster, and further reinforce wider social and
economic divisions between different spaces
within a metropolitan area (Fagan, 2004).
Prisons are also a key component of wider
carceral geographies. These geographies
promise to enlarge as concerns aboutterror-
ismintensify. Sites such as Guantanamo Bay
are part of a carceral archipelago, a ‘global war
prison’, used to further the ‘war on terror’
(Gregory, 2007). Indeed, the logic of impris-
onment is arguably extended to other terrains


  • such as Gaza, often described as an extended
    ‘open-air prison’ – to monitor and control
    those deemed hostile to the particular interests
    of a state. skh


Suggested reading
Gilmore (2007); Rhodes (2004).

private and public spheres Discursively
constructed, contested categories that define
boundaries between households, market econ-
omies, the state and political participation.
The concepts are central to two distinctive,
yet intertwined, discussions of: the public
sphere, and ideologies and practices of separ-
ate spheres.
Ju ̈rgen Habermas’ account of the bourgeois
public spherehas been particularly influential
(seecapitalism;critical theory). He argued
that early capitalist societies were organized
into four institutional spheres: family-
consumer (private), market economy (pri-
vate), the state (public) and citizen-political
participation (public) – the last he identifies
as the bourgeois public sphere. As both a his-
torical phenomena and normative ideal, the
bourgeois public sphere functioned as a coun-
terweight to the state; it was where ‘the public’
was organized and represented, and served to
mediate the relations between thestateand
society. This liberal model of the public
sphere (see liberalism) was never fully
achieved, he argued, but became less attain-
able in welfare state capitalist societies, in
which the separation between the state and
economy, public and private, was dissolved,
and family-consumer and citizen roles were
transformed. The role of citizen assumed
new forms (seecitizenship): of passive recipi-
ent of publicity and social welfare client.
Habermas’ account is suggestive to geograph-
ers: he analyses landscape changes that
concretize and reinforce both the rise and
decline in active public debate (e.g. coffee
houses and nineteenth-century urban culture,
and thesuburb, respectively: Habermas, 1989
[1962]). His account of the ideal of the

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PRIVATE AND PUBLIC SPHERES
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