ABSTRACT
Space, time and movement have particular meanings and significance for Australian prisoners attempting higher education while incarcerated. In a sense, the prison is another ‘world’ or ‘country’ with its own spatial and temporal arrangements and constraints for incarcerated university students. The contemporary digital university typically presupposes a level of mobility and access to mobile communication technologies which most Australian prisoners cannot access. This article examines the immobility of incarcerated students and their attempts to complete tertiary and pre-tertiary distance education courses without direct internet access. Drawing on critical mobilities theory, this article also explores attempts to address this digital disconnection of incarcerated students and where such interventions have been frustrated by movement issues within the prison. Prison focus group data suggest the use of modified digital learning technologies in prisons needs to be informed by a critical approach to the institutional processes and practices of this unique and challenging learning environment. This article also highlights the limitations and contradictions of painful immobilisation as a core strategy of Australia’s modern, expanding penal state, which encourages rehabilitation through education, while effectively cutting prisoners off from the wider digital world.
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Notes on contributors
Helen Farley
Associate Professor Helen Farley is based in the Australian Digital Futures Institute, University of Southern Queensland (USQ), and is the project leader of the Making the Connection project which is improving access to higher education for incarcerated students and other tertiary and pre-tertiary students without internet access.
Susan Hopkins
Dr. Susan Hopkins is a lecturer in the Open Access College, University of Southern Queensland (USQ), and teaches tertiary preparation students, including incarcerated students.