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Subject:
From:
Naomi Bar-Yam <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Lactation Information and Discussion <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 16 Jan 2012 09:35:00 -0500
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Hi everyone,
This crossed my email today, it occurs to me that a paper on  
breastfeeding in public might be good for this issue. Any takers?

Naomi



CALL FOR PAPERS
Demeter Press
is seeking submissions for an edited collection
Criminalized Mothers: Criminalizing Motherhood
Co-editors: Joanne Minaker and Bryan Hogeveen
Submission Deadline for Abstracts:June 1, 2012
Alongside the dissemination of toxic neoliberal policies that benefit  
the richest segments of society, the conditions in which criminalized  
women mother have eroded. While the affluent savor the fruits of  
investment into new markets and unfettered movement of capital around  
the globe, the poor and marginalized find themselves subject to  
increasing levels of surveillance and social control strategies  
intended to monitor their movements and intrusively govern their  
conduct. In the same instant, residues of the welfare state that  
initially undergirded the well-being of the impoverished and  
marginalized crumble under the weight of a state that appears  
unwilling to offer any meaningful assistance. In this ethos of gross  
income disparities and the vilification of the most marginalized  
segments of society the criminal justice state manages the excess and  
punishes the impoverished. Males continue to constitute the vast  
majority of individuals dealt with by the criminal justice state.  
Women, especially poor and racialized females, are nevertheless the  
fastest growing prison population worldwide. Whether through prison,  
house arrest, probation or restorative justice many marginalized women  
and girls find themselves subjected to state sponsored controls. Many  
of these women and girls are mothers. We collectively know very little  
about the conditions and contexts under which these women care for  
their children. This collection examines the challenges, difficulties  
and successes of criminalized mothers. It will highlight innovative  
programs and enterprising projects that seek to carve out welcome and  
hospitable spaces for these women. In particular, it seeks to give a  
voice to marginalized women who are too often silent and silenced by  
systems of control. The editors seek article length contributions from  
scholars and practitioners from all disciplines, including (but not  
limited to) criminology, sociology, social legal studies, education,  
political science, philosophy, criminal justice studies, geography and  
anthropology. We are equally interested in auto-ethnographic accounts  
that detail the frustrations and triumphs of mothers who have  
experienced criminal justice interventions. Artwork, poetry and short  
stories are also welcome.

Articles may examine (but are not limited to) the following topics:
Probation and mothering; mothering on house arrest; restorative  
justice and motherhood; mothering in the context of domestic violence;  
prison mother/child programs; mothering while incarcerated; criminal  
justice policies and motherhood; the criminalization of poverty and  
motherhood; addictions and mothering; mothering sex workers;  
criminalized girls and mothering; programs for young female offenders  
and their children; motherhood and risk; surveillance and mothering;  
ethnography; mothering on parole; racialized mothers; child welfare;  
foster mothering; immigrant mothers; tensions between rights and needs  
of children and mothers.
Submission Guidelines

Please submit 250 word abstracts and a 50 word biography and  
citizenship.
Deadline for abstracts: June 1, 2012. Completed chapters are due June  
1, 2013
Please send submissions and inquiries directly to Joanne Minaker
([log in to unmask]) and Bryan Hogeveen ([log in to unmask])
Demeter Press
140 Holland St. West, PO 13022
Bradford, ON L3Z 2Y5 Tel: (905) 775-9089
www.demeterpress.org / [log in to unmask]
------------------------------------------
Naomi Bar-Yam Ph.D.
Executive Director
Mothers' Milk Bank of New England

[log in to unmask]
617-527-6263
www.milkbankne.org
------------------------------------------
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