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European Corrections Corporation
A Project by Martin Krenn & Oliver Ressler
Container Installation in Graz and Wels
The institution prison is an instrument of discipline,
punishment, and exclusion, and functions as an agent of control
and normalization. In today's society, the prison also has an additional
important role as a site of economic production, in which the prisoners
must work for a minimum wage. For the most part, it is the expanding
prison industry that profits from this enterprise.
In the U.S.,
corporations such as Wackenhut and Corrections Corporation of America
(CCA) have aspired to high profits through building and operating
correctional facilities since the 1980s. Their influence has also
continued to increase in Europe for the past years. They consider
the European market as a growth market, which they want a share
of as early as possible. CCA has pushed forward the construction
and management of partially privatized prisons in France. Wackenhut
and CCA have already been building and running correctional facilities
in Great Britain for more than ten years. There, not one single
state prison has been built since opening the prison system to private
companies.
The project
"European Corrections Corporation" focuses on the phenomenon
of the advancing privatization of prisons in Europe and questions
the institution prison. A walk-in container, 605 x 243 x 259 cm,
covered with a printed tarpaulin, will be placed in the pedestrian
zones in the center of Graz and Wels. On the tarpaulin is a detailed
CAD graphic with text commentary, which visualizes a private corporation's
future privatization and rebuilding of the Graz-Karlau and Wels
correctional facility. Like a real company, EUCC (European Corrections
Corporation) attempts to use the prison as a de-territorialized
site of production within the capitalist economy and presents a
model for the profitable utilization of the prisoners' labor power.
Thus, the constructions of prison buildings in the correctional
facilities in Graz and Wels is meant to double the number of spaces
available for prisoners.
Projected inside
the container will be a seventeen-minute video based on an interview
with the British activist Mark Barnsley. Barnsley was incarcerated
for eight years in twenty-two different private and state prisons
in Great Britain and consistently refused to work there. Barnsley
shows that underlying both state run and privately run prisons is
the idea that criminality is a disease and a social evil, which
they attempt to maintain with force, with disciplinary machines.
The video thematizes the function and the transformation of the
prison as an institution and shows possibilities for resistance
inside and outside of the prisons.
The container
installation in Graz is accessible from 24 May until 26 October
2003 in the Annenstraße/near Südtirolerplatz as part
of the exhibition project, "real* utopia" by , within
the framework of the Cultural Capital Graz 2003.
The container
installation in Wels is accessible from 28 June bis 5 July 2003
at the Stadtplatz Wels as part of the "Festival der Regionen".
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