When Prison Is the Classroom: Collaborative Learning about Urban Inequality/
Material type:![Article](/opac-tmpl/lib/famfamfam/AR.png)
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Library, SPAB | Reference Collection | v. 40 (1-4) / Jan- Dec 2020. | Available |
This article analyzes the pedagogy of an urban sociology course taught in prison, with both outside and imprisoned students. The course examined the production of knowledge used in the field of planning and sought to facilitate the coproduction of new insights about urban inequality. Participant observation, focus groups, and students’ written reflections reveal that, in comparison to traditional classroom settings, students explored with greater complexity their embodiment of multiple social identities, wrestled more deeply with the structural embeddedness of individual agency, and situated their personal experiences in a broader theoretical narrative about urban inequality. Building trust in the face of significant power disparities within the classroom was essential to learning. The findings highlight the importance of new locations of learning that enable classrooms to become contact zones, pushing students to collaboratively reimagine justice in the city with those outside the traditional classroom.
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