International Workshop "Inequality and penality: Explorations in the contemporary political economy of punishment"

Opening: Carla Faralli and Dario Melossi.

  • Data: dal 27 giugno 2019 al 28 giugno 2019

  • Luogo: CIRSFID, Via Galliera, 3, Bologna

  • Modalità d'accesso: Ingresso libero

Program

First Day (Kelsen Room, II floor)

  • 9.00 Opening
    - Prof. Carla Faralli (Director of CIRSFID, University of Bologna)
    - Prof. Dario Melossi (Organizing committee, University of Bologna)
  • 9.30 Session 1
    Chair: Rossella Selmini (University of Bologna, Italy)
    1. Hadar Aviram (Hastings College, USA): “Progressive Punitivism: Notes on Using Punitive Means to Advance Social Justice Ends”.
    2. David Green (John Jay College, USA): “Moral indignation, hot blood, bad faith: Reckoning and rectifying the thymotic harms of crime, punishment, and inequality”.
    3. Paula Maurutto, Kelly Hannah-Moffat and Fernando Avila (University of Toronto, Canada): “Reconfiguring Punishment through Algorithmic Fairness”
  • 11.15 Break
  • 11.45 Session 2
    Chair: Dario Melossi (University of Bologna, Italy)
    1. Dawn Moore (Carleton University, Canada) “Looking From North West to South East: Feminist Carceralism, Gender Equality and Global Responses to Gender Based Violence”.
    2. Gaëtan Cliquennois (CNRS-University of Nantes, France) ‘Differentiated access to justice and legal aid for prisoners as source of inequality and punishment in prison’.
    3. Lynne Haney (New York University, USA): “Incarcerated Fathers and the Paternal Politics of Poverty
  • 13.30 Lunch
  • 15.00 Session 3.
    Chair: Maximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral, Argentina)
    1. Gail Super (University of Toronto, Canada) and Ana Ballesteros (University of La Coruña, Spain): “Punishment and inequality on the periphery of the State, a view from South Africa’s informal settlements and the southern border of Spain”
    2. Luiz Phelipe Dal Santo (University of Oxford, UK): “Inequality, punishment and discipline at Global Periphery: contextualizing criminological knowledge beyond developed countries”
    3. Manuel Iturralde (University of Los Andes, Colombia): “Punishment and inequality in Latin America. What we know, what we don´t, and what we should know”
  • 16.45 Coffee Break
  • 17.15 Session 4
    Chair: Stefania Crocitti (University of Bologna, Italy).
    1. José Luis Díez-Ripollés (University of Málaga, Spain): “RIMES: An Instrument to Compare National Criminal Justice Policies From the Social Exclusion Dimension”
    2. Maximo Sozzo (National University of Litoral, Argentina): “Inequality, welfare and punishment. Comparative perspectives on economy, politics and punishment in contemporary societies”.
    3. Charlotte Vanneste (National Institute of Criminology and Criminalistics/University of Liege, Belgium) “Inequality and Penality. The hidden side of a complex relationship”.
  • 20.30 Conference Dinner

Second Day (Russell Room, I floor)

  • 9.00 Session 5
    Chair: Giulia Fabini (Universty of Bologna, Italy)
    1. Carla Benitez Martins (Federal University of Goias, Brazil): “For a unequal and combined economy of punishment: reflections on criminal control in dependant capitalism countries in the phase of the Great Industry"
    2. Dario Melossi (University of Bologna, Italy): “Prison and subordination: mass imprisonment and post-Fordism”
    3. Stefania Crocitti (University of Bologna, Italy): “Foreigners, Inequality and Prison in Italy”
  • 10.45 Coffee Break
  • 11.15 Session 6
    Chair: Maximo Sozzo(National University of Litoral, Argentina)
    1. Zelia A. Gallo (University College of London, UK): “Linking inequality, ideology, and punishment in times of ‘anti-politics’”.
    2. Joao Veloso (University of Ottawa, Canada): “Toward a Plurinormative Political Economy of Punishment: Differential Management of Illegalities and Administrative Forms of Punishment in Canada”.
    3. Perla Arianna Allegri (University of Torino, Italy): “Electronic Surveillance and Net-Widening: a (dis) proportional relationship”
    4. Michele Miravalle (University of Torino, Italy): “Exploring the “diagnostic imperialism" in prisons. When Health and Criminal Justice favour inequality”.
  • 13.30 Closure

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