Commodity, Scarcity and Power in the Carceral Economy
journal contribution
posted on 2025-10-30, 03:03authored byDwayne Antojado
An interrogation of the economic dimensions of carceral spaces reveals how everyday commodities, including toiletries, food, and clothing, are mobilized within prisons. Drawing on a substantial body of literature that illustrates the porous boundaries between carceral institutions and broader capitalist economies, this article demonstrates how deprivation, institutional regulation, and entrepreneurial agency intertwine to produce a vibrant internal economy. By exploring “buy-up” practices alongside the symbolic and functional roles of material possessions in prison life in Australia, the analysis illuminates the ways incarcerated individuals navigate scarcity, establish social hierarchies, and assert identity within confinement. In doing so, the prison economy emerges as a critical lens through which to understand not only the material conditions of incarceration but also the broader socio-economic structures and cultural logics that shape the lives of those within the carceral milieu.<p></p>