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'In humanity's machine' : prison health and history

Author(s):
Byrne, Fiachra, author
Howard League for Penal Reform, issuing body
Title(s):
'In humanity's machine' : prison health and history / Fiachra Byrne.
Country of Publication:
England
Publisher:
London (UK) : Howard League for Penal Reform, 2017.
Description:
1 online resource (1 PDF file (iv, 4 pages))
Language:
English
Electronic Links:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK540228/
Summary:
The pernicious and damaging effects of incarcerating juveniles has long been a topic of concern and controversy for reform groups, policy makers, childcare practitioners and academics; such concerns are doubly compounded where the mental health needs of the confined young person are in question. Yet, while there is a considerable scholarly literature on the history of juvenile delinquency and juvenile justice systems more broadly, there have been few substantial treatments of the institutional detention of juveniles in the modern era outside of official and non-official inquiries into historical allegations of child abuse. Equally, aside from a small number of highly focused studies, there is a paucity of scholarly research on the history of the mental health of juveniles in secure settings. Here, I detail the change in our understanding of the juvenile offender from that of a degraded if redeemable moral agent in the nineteenth century to our current conception of the detained youth as a figure marked by psychiatric morbidity, behavioural disturbance and complex needs. One of my central findings is that the context of institutional confinement itself has been an essential factor in the long-term psychiatric pathologisation of detained juveniles. This framed the scale, manner and context of their frequent group conceptualisation as potentially dangerous and uniquely debilitated by psychiatric morbidity. This is not to argue that the presence of trauma and psychiatric morbidity amongst juveniles in custody is simply a historical construct. Nor is it an argument that the use of psychiatry for detained youths merely constituted yet another instance of factitious medical labeling for the purposes of social control. Rather I suggest that, historically at least, the deployment of psychiatric diagnoses and treatment facilities within the youth secure estate has often primarily served institutional or political needs rather than the needs of juveniles in custody.
MeSH:
Adolescent, Institutionalized
England
History, 19th Century
History, 20th Century
Ireland
Juvenile Delinquency/history*
Mental Health Services/history
Mental Health Services/legislation & jurisprudence
Prisoners/psychology*
Notes:
"This is the author manuscript of an article published in Early Career Academics Network Bulletin, July 2017."
Includes bibliographical references.
Issued also in print.
Other ID:
(OCoLC)1128187672
NLM ID:
101747358 [Electronic Resource]

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