Transcarceration at home: housing journeys of gender and criminalization

March 2025
Spaces of Struggle sessions in radical planning at the American Association of Geographers Annual Meeting. Detroit MI

May 2025
Capillary Critical Geographies Network Conference. Montreal QC.

Housing insecurity is increasingly recognized as having a bi-directional relationship with criminalization, acting both as a pathway into, and revolving door with the criminal (in)justice system. In addition to the direct criminalization of houselessness, there are a multiple intersecting and concomitant criminalized experiences of social and economic marginalization and related survival strategies that perpetuate this pathway. People exiting prison experience multiple barriers to accessing and retaining housing. Many post-release housing options, including halfway houses, operate as institutionalized carceral environments beyond the prison walls frequently reproducing the relationships and routines of prison life. The existing literature on housing and criminalization generally focusses on housing insecurity at these distinct moments directly proceeding and/or follow incarceration, expanding but still maintaining a boundary between prison and free society.

In this paper, I draw on abolition geography and feminist criminological literature on transcarceration to locate carceral practices, relationships, and spaces that invade and structure the often invisibilized forms of housing insecurity experienced by women. This paper offers preliminary reflections on this social co-production of carceral/housing injustice and the interdependence of the prison industrial complex with neoliberal, financialized housing systems. This work is part of my postdoctoral project mapping collective housing journeys of gender and criminalization. Through a series of storytelling and countermapping workshops co-designed with women with lived experience of housing insecurity and criminalization this project aims to better understand and represent the complexity of the role housing, or lack thereof, plays across the lives of women impacted by criminalization in so-called Canada.

Radical Solidarities in Punk and Queer Refusals of Safety and Inclusion Narratives in Planning

Urban Planning Vol 8, No 2 (2023): Queer(ing) Urban Planning and Municipal Governance

Abstract:  Recent call-outs against Ottawa punk venues have fueled public debates about safe space and the inclusivity of local music scenes. The Ottawa Music Strategy released in 2018 translated these debates into cultural development policy that links creative placemaking and safe space discourse. This article examines the civic response to activist call-outs by analyzing how the Ottawa Music Strategy integrates diversity and inclusion strategies into cultural policy, and how cultural policy and safe space policies intersect with cultural revitalization and economic development priorities in the Ottawa Official Plan. Punk counter-narratives developed through grounded ethnographic research in the Ottawa punk scene unsettle normative public safety narratives that frame punk spaces as unsafe. Place-based histories of anti-oppression tactics, logics, and traditions of punk space and activism contextualize alternative responses by local punk venues and promoters. Drawing upon literature in queer planning and queer geography and literature on intersections between radical queer and punk politics, spatialities, and identities, this article discusses punking planning in solidarity with queering planning through alternative community-based responses to issues of safety, inclusion, and participation.

Keywords:  creative placemaking; cultural planning; punk; queer planning; spatial justice

Published:   22 May 2023

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.17645/up.v8i2.6372