xiu2024spatialising
Spatialising ‘carceral mobilities’: extracting census data for analysis of prisoner inflow, transfer and release
Gezhi Xiu, Jennifer Turner and Thilo Gross
to appear in J Comp Soc Sci
Responding to the dearth of fully-comprehensive or summary data on prisoner or ‘carceral mobilities’, this paper provides the first comprehensive case study analysis of the flow into, between and out from prisons. By uniquely extracting data from the 2011 UK Census to identify and visualise trends in movement, highlight centrality of institutions and observe the self-containedness of regions of operation, findings reveal specific volumes and geographies of prisoner flow as well as discrepancies with the expected practices of prison category transfers and disparities between the distances travelled by prisoners in establishments with different functions. Such analysis is a critical tool in appraising (in)efficiencies with the governance of prisons at the regional and national level. In conclusion, Census Data is revealed as a viable source of data for analysis in situations where institutional data is not forthcoming/available, which provides significant potential for the advancement of the range and scope of studies in carceral mobilities and criminological research more broadly.
Network of Prisoner transfers in England and Wales. There are very few networks in the UK in which London is not a hub, but this is an example. Prisoners are mostly transferred further north.
Figure 1: Network of Prisoner transfers in England and Wales. There are very few networks in the UK in which London is not a hub, but this is an example. Prisoners are mostly transferred further north.