Unshackling Accounting in Prisons: Race, Gender, and Class
Accounting in Conflict: Globalization, Gender, Race and Class
ISBN: 978-1-78560-976-3, eISBN: 978-1-78560-975-6
Publication date: 9 November 2016
Abstract
This chapter contributes to literature illustrating accounting’s impact in making things governable, thinkable, and knowable. Although critical accounting research has been exemplary in examining consequences of its practices on vulnerable populations, there has been a scarcity of investigation regarding incarcerated populace. This chapter begins the process of exploring neoliberal discipline, rule, and calculative techniques intersecting with gender, race, and class in prisons. For this disenfranchised population the construction of the “feared and deviant other” is of particular significance. A crime-control dynamic mythologizing and dreading the criminal has become so institutionalized that discourses justifying surveillance, dominance, and injustice have become normalized, in which accounting takes part. We are particularly interested in the impact for incarcerated women who are shackled, sterilized, and at risk, modes of control that are extraordinary. As such, the dynamics of knowledge creation challenges us to ask what initiates visibility and transformation. We suggest the narratives of incarcerated women are potential devices in this process, and add to an emerging literature revealing the emancipatory possibility of alternative, or counter-accounts. Seen as tools of resistance and change, we give voice to their narratives. As their accounts demonstrate resilience and power, we reject an inevitability of silence. Rather, these critical accounts provide pathways for thinking differently and aspiring for a change, as the social never disappears.
Keywords
Acknowledgements
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author is grateful to the reviewers for their insights and to Hofstra University, School of Business for research support.
Citation
Lehman, C.R. (2016), "Unshackling Accounting in Prisons: Race, Gender, and Class", Accounting in Conflict: Globalization, Gender, Race and Class (Advances in Public Interest Accounting, Vol. 19), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 89-112. https://doi.org/10.1108/S1041-706020160000019006
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2017 Emerald Group Publishing Limited