In-care-ceration

Leah Montange and Meredith Ruff

This show unpacks various ways that the mental healthcare and criminal justice systems are entangled, and through that entanglement grow. The show features the voices and perspectives of people who are currently or formerly locked up, as well as advocates in the healthcare and criminal justice systems. We hope it provides helpful information and analysis for people who are concerned with abolition in Washington and everywhere. This project was supported by the Institute of Human Geography.

Episodes

  1. Episode 6: Care Reform, Care Otherwise

    03/20/2025

    Episode 6: Care Reform, Care Otherwise

    Show notes: Episode 6: Care Reform, Care Otherwise Episode transcript here. In this episode we explore ways that people are working to build a more caring and care-full world, and to address the harms of our carceral systems whether they are prisons, jails, or hospitals. Some of the people we talk to are interested in engaging with Washington State to change systems, and others are more interested in finding ways to do care otherwise, outside of state systems. This episode features the words of Scout Smedley, SYP, Cindi Fisher, Joshua Wallace, Lauara Van Tosh, Chris Carney, Shaun Glaze, and LeTania Severe, as well as Patreece Spence. We’d like to dedicate this episode, and the whole series to those who lost their lives or their loved ones’ lives – physically or socially - to carceral systems; and to all who have devoted their lives to creating a more just, caring future, one where we aren’t relying on cages or confinement to solve social problems. Thank you!   Resources: Amanda Ong, ”CALM Launches Medic Hotline to Provide Community Health Navigation” International Peer Respite/Soteria Summit 2021  Open Dialogue approach to mental healthcare -  Seattle City Council funding for Community Safety Capacity Building/Alternatives to Policing  Mental Health First (Oakland)  CAHOOTS (Eugene) Bay Area Transformative Justice Collective (BATJC, Bay Area) BATJC Podmapping tool   Fireweed Collective  Instituted for Development of Human Arts (NYC)

    1h 3m
  2. Episode 3: Civil commitment

    03/20/2025

    Episode 3: Civil commitment

    Show Notes: Episode 3: Civil Commitment Episode transcript here. In this episode, we take on the topic of civil commitment and experience. We address hospitalization, the emergency room, and the perspectives of people who work in the system and who receive treatment.  We address ways that civil commitment resembles incarceration. We speak to SYP and Laura Van Tosh, and feature the words of Cindi Fisher – all people whose lives and advocacy have intersected with the civil commitment system. This episode contains descriptions of civil commitment and emergency rooms, including discussions of suicidality. Music by Scout Smedley and editing by Nest Audio Co. Relevant news articles: Joseph Wainer - There’s a Crisis of Violence at Western State Hospital. I Know, I Used to Work There Joseph O’Sullivan - Western State Hospital loses $53 million in federal funding after failing inspection Updates: Eílis O’Neill - Seattle Just Got 150 Psych Unit Beds - Is it Enough to Make a Difference?  King County DCHS Blog - First-Of-Its-Kind Behavioral Health Crisis Center Opens in North King County Resources: Disability Rights Washington - From Hospitals to Handcuffs: Criminalizing Patients in Crisis - https://disabilityrightswa.org/reports/from-hospitals-to-handcuffs/  Mariam Kaba and Andrea Ritchie: No More Police: A Case for Abolition Fireweed Collective - https://fireweedcollective.org/  Instituted for Development of Human Arts - https://www.idha-nyc.org/

    46 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
4 Ratings

About

This show unpacks various ways that the mental healthcare and criminal justice systems are entangled, and through that entanglement grow. The show features the voices and perspectives of people who are currently or formerly locked up, as well as advocates in the healthcare and criminal justice systems. We hope it provides helpful information and analysis for people who are concerned with abolition in Washington and everywhere. This project was supported by the Institute of Human Geography.