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OU Carceral Studies Consortium Announces 2022 Student Work Prize Recipients

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OU Carceral Studies Consortium Announces 2022 Student Work Prize Recipients

The University of Oklahoma Carceral Studies Consortium is pleased to announce the 2022 Student Work Prize recipients. The prize recognizes excellence in scholarly or creative work from any discipline which engages carceral studies, broadly construed, during the 2021-2022 academic year. Congratulations, all!

Reconstructing Incarceration

  • Student Lead:   J.D. Zogg
  • Student Team:   Logan Steitle, John Still, Henry Truong, James Nemeth, Brandon White, Casey Meyer, Chelsey Dollison, Jack Harp, Jackson Ware, Liam Kelley, Lindsay Goetz, Nick Pazdernik, Ricardo Silva, Sager Alghanim, Vanessa Khoury
  • Class:   Architectural Design Studio IX (Fifth-Year)
  • Instructors:   Marjorie Callahan and Keith Gaddie

Paper/Project Abstract: This fifth-year architecture studio class, offered in Fall 2021, was exceptionally different from past studios. Our tasks included a presentation to the Department of State in Washington, D.C., along with the development of an exhibition to exemplify the group’s work throughout the semester. We worked on the conceptual redesign of the Oklahoma County Jail, to be used as a flagship location to reimagine the incarceration system as a whole.

Tour the online exhibition by clicking the link below.

Reconstructing Incarceration Exhibit

“COVID-19 and the Penal System: Effects of Race on Federal Sentencing Departures During the Pandemic”

  • Paul White, Economics
  • Class: ECON 5940
  • Instructor: Jonathan McFadden

Paper/Project Abstract: The United States Sentencing Commission publishes yearly reports of all federal rime sentences. This paper examines the differences in the likelihood of receiving a COVID-19 related sentence variance.

“COVID-19 and the Penal System: Effects of Race on Federal Sentencing Departures During the Pandemic”

  • Margaret Doyle, Sociology
  • Class: ENGL 1213
  • Instructor: Lamanda Conrad

Paper/Project Abstract: This paper is the written version of a speech delivered in an English class as part of a final assignment. The speech focuses on reasons to care about the failures of the United States Penal System. It details the arguments for and against prison reform and possible reforms that could be made in the near future to better the rehabilitative ability of prisons in the United States. The final part of this speech asks the listener/reader to speak with their local lawmakers about this issue and become part of a change.

 

The Carceral Studies Consortium is hosted by the Gibbs College of Architecture.


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