Closer to Antarctica than to Buenos Aires, the port town of Ushuaia,
Argentina is home to a national park as well as a museum that is housed
in the world's southernmost prison. Ushuaia's radial panopticon operated
as an experimental hybrid penal colony and penitentiary from 1902 to
1947, designed to revolutionize modern prisons globally. A Carceral
Ecology offers the first comprehensive study of this notorious prison
and its afterlife, documenting how the Patagonian frontier and timber
economy became central to ideas about labor, rehabilitation, and
resource management. Mining the records of penologists, naturalists, and
inmates, Ryan C. Edwards shows how discipline was tied to forest
management, but also how inmates gained situated geographical knowledge
and reframed debates on the regeneration of the land and the self.
Bringing a new imperative to global prison studies, Edwards asks us to
rethink the role of the environment in carceral practices as well as the
impact of incarceration on the natural world.