Publication:
Convict Labor in Turkey, 1936–1953: A Capitalist Corporation in the State?

Placeholder

Institution Authors

Research Projects

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type

article

Access

restrictedAccess

Publication Status

published

Journal Issue

Abstract

The article proposes the institutional analysis of convict labor as an alternative to both (profit-oriented) economic and (discipline-oriented) political explanations. The specialized labor-based prisons in Turkey from 1936 to 1953 are brought to light by archival research and are presented here as a rich case to discuss the experiential/subjective conditions of unfree labor regimes and the structural effects of institutions on the convicts’ experiences. I argue that the state department responsible for prison labor in Turkey was transformed into a capitalist corporation with bureaucratic management, and the target of convict labor system was neither profit nor discipline, but the creation of the corporate bureaucracy itself. As a consequence, both for prisoners and for the prison staff, labor-based prisons appeared as privileged places. Hence, unfree labor was volunteered.

Date

2016

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Description

Keywords

Citation


Page Views

0

File Download

0