On Friday, October 14, 2016, Western New England University School of Law hosted the daylong
Gender and Incarceration Symposium in the Blake Law Common, organized
and supported by Western New England Law Review and the Clason Speaker
Series.
Scholars from across the country gathered for an interdisciplinary
discussion of issues facing incarcerated individuals such as parental
rights, treatment of transgender inmates, sexual orientation-based
segregation, sexual violence, pregnancy, solitary confinement, and the
intersection of race and gender in confinement.
“The mass incarceration system which entraps black and brown men is a
backlash to the civil rights gains of the 1960,” remarked Associate
Professor of History Jen Manion, from Amherst College. “It is an ever
expanding web of control and violence.” Manion is the author of two
books, Liberty's Prisoners: Carceral Culture in Early America, and Taking Back the Academy: History of Activism, History as Activism. Manion
is currently working on her third book titled, “Born in the Wrong Time:
Transgender Archives & the History of Possibility, 1740-1890.”
“One in every three women incarcerated
in the world are incarcerated right here in the United States,”
explained Rachel Roth, author of Breaking Promises: Violations of the Massachusetts Pregnancy Standards and Anti-Shackling Law. “Although Massachusetts has a reputation as being a progressive state, a few years ago, when other states were repealing their three-strikes laws, Massachusetts passed one.”
Also presenting at the symposium were
Professor Gabriel Arkles from Northeastern University, Brenda Smith from
Washington College of Law at American University, Terry Kupers from the
Wright Institute, and Carol Strickman from Legal Services for Prisoners
with Children.
The Symposium concluded with a panel
moderated by Erin Buzuvis, Law Professor and Director of the Center for
Gender & Sexuality Studies at Western New England, providing the
symposium attendees an opportunity to delve more deeply into the topics
discussed throughout the day. Western New England Law Review Symposium
Editor Samantha J. LeBoeuf, and Editor-in-Chief Sarah A. Morgan planned
and organized this successful symposium.
“I believe social awareness is an
important catalyst for reform,” explained Samantha LeBoeuf. “The
symposium created an opportunity to discuss issues that otherwise go
unheard. We were proud to host such a wonderful group of scholars and
practitioners for an informative and interdisciplinary discussion.”