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Coloniality and Mental Health, Neurological and Substance Abuse (MNS) Disorders in Guyana’s Prisons Today

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posted on 2022-03-29, 10:22 authored by Queenela Cameron, Dylan Kerrigan
There is a relationship between the social actions and social structures laid down during colonialism, and the social hierarchies and inequalities that developed as British Guiana moved slowly from British colony to Independent Guyana. From slavery and indigenous marginalisation, to indentureship and colonial social relations, modern Guyana emerges from the legacies of an Imperial project, and most notably “enslavement, immigration, and population management” (Anderson 2019). In the context of Guyana’s prisons today, the echoes and ghosts of this Imperial project can be said to still haunt the grounds and insides of these decaying buildings, as well as stalking the lives and minds of inmates themselves.

Funding

MNS Disorders in Guyana's Jails, 1825 to the present day

Economic and Social Research Council

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History

Citation

LIAS Working Paper Series, vol 4 (2021)

Author affiliation

Department of Criminology

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

Published in

LIAS Working Paper Series

Volume

4

Publisher

University of Leicester Open Journals

issn

2516-4783

Copyright date

2020

Available date

2022-03-29

Language

en

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