Prison and the Revolution in Myanmar

The Prison and the Revolution in Myanmar: Exploring Prison Protests During a Revolutionary Situation” (doi: 10.1080/00472336.2024.2360098) is a new article by Tomas Max Martin and Andrew M. Jefferson, both of DIGNITY – Danish Institute Against Torture in Copenhagen, and an author who needs to remain anonymous.

This is the fifth paper for a forthcoming Special Issue titled “Revolution and Solidarity in Myanmar,” and guest edited by Justine Chambers and Nick Cheesman.

The abstract for the paper states:

What role do prison protests play in revolutions? This article examines the prison protests that have occurred since the military coup, situating them as integral and instructive elements of an unfolding revolutionary situation. The analysis explores the character and significance of such protests at a moment of fierce and violent political contestation. It documents and contextualises them and develops an argument about their contemporary significance informed by the academic literature on prisons and revolution and prisons and protest. The article shows how the prison today is a revolutionary battlefront characterised by the activation and vulnerability of prisoners’ bodies, the interrelation between collective and individual actions and consequences, and the connection between events outside and inside the prison. Today’s protests resonate evocatively with those of the past. They are sometimes a deliberate intervention in bigger struggles and sometimes a response to the everyday and immediate provocation of inhumane conditions. Whatever the range of forms, patterns, drivers, and triggers of prison protests, the most common response from the authorities is violence, often with deadly effects.

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