A New Prison for Migrants and the Struggle Against It
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History CA
5y ago
This is a special episode about a new migrant detention centre/migrant prison being built outside of Montreal and the struggle that is unfolding against it and all borders and prisons ..read more
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Ep 5: Prisoner Justice Day in the Prison for Women
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History Podcast
5y ago
This episode features Ann, an anarchist who was arrested in the 1980s for participating in an underground guerilla group called Direct Action. She ended up getting a life sentence and doing 7 years in Kingston's Prison for Women (P4W), which is now closed. She also got her parole revoked on two separate occasions, once in 2006 and once in 2012. Ann talked to us about the differences between doing time in the Prison for Women in Kingston versus GVI - the Grand Valley Institute (in southern Ontario), one of the regional federal prisons for women that was built after P4W was closed. She also ment ..read more
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Ep 4: Prisoner Justice Day from the Outside
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History Podcast
5y ago
This episode features Marie Beemans, an outside activist and organizer who has been supporting prisoners since she was a teenager. Marie was particularly active with a group called the Office des Droits des Detenues (or ODD), which was affiliated with the Ligue des Droits in Quebec until they were kicked out of the Ligue des Droits for supporting prisoners in the aftermath of the 1982 riot in Archambault Penitentiary. In the interview, Marie talks about what drew her to prisoner support and prison abolition organizing, what that organizing looked like, and the underlying values that drive her ..read more
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Ep 3: Prisoner Justice Day, Inmates Committees, and Resistance on the Inside
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History Podcast
5y ago
In the third episode, we talk to Gene, who started doing time in canadian prisons in 1972. Gene talks to us about the early days of PJD on the inside and the role that inmates committees and outside support played in prisoner resistance in the 70s and 80s. He talks a bit about protective custody or PC, and how changes to protective custody policies in federal prisons undermined solidarity. At the end of the show, we mention the website penalpress.com. The site features a catalogue of newspapers produced in prisons in canada. Check it out for an inside perspective on the canadian prison system ..read more
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Ep 2: Prisoner Justice Day on the Inside
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History Podcast
5y ago
This episode features Papi, who spent 29 years in prison in canada. He talks about conditions on the inside in the 1970s and 1980s, including what it was like to be in prison for Prisoner Justice Day back then. He also talks about prisoner resistance and changes implemented by the federal prison system and how they impacted prisoners. The book mentioned at the end of the episode is 'Prisons in Canada' by Luc Gosselin, published by Black Rose Books in 1977 ..read more
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Ep 1: The Backstory of Prisoner Justice Day
What Happened to Prisoner Justice Day?
by Prison History Podcast
5y ago
This is the first episode of 'What happened to Prisoner Justice Day?': a podcast mini series about the history of prisons in canada focusing on differences in the prison system in the 1960s-1980s versus today. The podcast features interviews with former and current prisoners, as well as supporters on the outside. This first episode features Bob Gaucher, a former prisoner and retired professor at the University of Ottawa who talks about his experiences inside in the 1960s and gives some historical context for Prisoner Justice Day. For more history about Prisoner Justice Day, check out http://ww ..read more
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