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Dive into the research topics where Azrini Wahidin is active.

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Featured researches published by Azrini Wahidin.


Journal of Aging and Identity | 2002

Reconfiguring Older Bodies in the Prison Time Machine

Azrini Wahidin

It is by mapping an area that the geographer comes to understand the contours and formations of a place. The “place” in this case is the prison world. This article serves to map moments in prison demonstrating how “old” female bodies are performed under the prison gaze. In this article I will illustrate how older women subvert, negotiate, or invoke discourse as a means of reinscribing the normalizing discourses that serve to confine and define older womens experiences in prison. Female elders in prison become defined and confined by regimes of femininity and ageism. They have to endure symbolic and actual intrusions of physical privacy, which serve to remind them of what they were, where they are, and what they have become. This article will critically explore the complexity and contradictions of time use in prison and how they impact on embodied identities. By incorporating the voices of elders, I hope to draw out the contradictions and dilemmas which they experience, thereby illustrating the relationship between time, their involvement in doing time, and the performance of time in a total institution (see Goffman, 1961), and the relationship between temporality and existence. The stories of the women show how their identities are caught within the movement and motion of time and space, both in terms of the time of “the real” on the outside and within prison time. This is the in-between space of carceral time within which women live and which they negotiate. It is by being caught in this network of carceral time that they are constantly being “remade” as their body/performance of identities alters within it. While only a small percentage of the female prison population in the United Kingdom are in later life, one has to question why criminological and gerontological literature fail to address the needs of a growing significant minority.


International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007

Understanding risk and old age in western society

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin; Jens O. Zinn

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the concept of “risk” in relation to old age. Ideas are explored linked with what has been termed as the “risk society” and the extent to which it has become part of the organizing ground of how we define and organise the “personal” and “social spaces” in which to grow old in western modernity.Design/methodology/approach – A theoretical paper in three parts, including: an introduction to the relevance and breakdown in trust relations; a mapping out of the key assumptions of risk society; and examples drawn from social welfarism to consolidate an understanding of the contructedness of old age in late modernity.Findings – Part of this reflexive response to understanding risk and old age is the importance of recognising self‐subjective dimensions of emotions, trust, biographical knowledge and resources.Originality/value – This discussion provides a critical narrative to the importance and interrelatedness of the sociology of risk to the study of old age.


International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2008

Understanding old age and victimisation: a critical exploration

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin

Purpose – The purpose of paper is to shine light on the under‐theorised relationship between old age and victmisation. In classical criminological studies, the relationship between “age”, victimisation and crime has been dominated by analysis of younger peoples experiences. This paper aims to address this knowledge deficit by exploring older peoples experiences by linking it to the social construction of vulnerability.Design/methodology/approach – The paper explores both historical and contemporary narratives relating to the diverse experiences of older people as victims in the UK. In particular, from 1945 to the present, statistical context and theoretical advancement illuminates that older people as a social group have a deep “fear of crime” to their relative victimisation.Findings – A careful survey of the criminological literature highlights a paucity of research relating to older peoples views and experiences of crime and victimisation. The conceptual issue of vulnerability in different contexts i...


International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2017

“The Irish Conflict” and the experiences of female ex-combatants in the Irish Republican Army

Azrini Wahidin; Jason L. Powell

Purpose The purpose of this paper is to critically explore the importance of the experiences of female former combatants during the Irish Conflict, colloquially known as “The Troubles” and outline key moments of resistance for female political prisoners during their time at Armagh jail. The paper will situate the analysis within a Foucauldian framework drawing on theoretical tools for understanding power, resistance and subjectivity to contextualise and capture rich narratives and experiences. What makes a Foucauldian analysis of former female combatants of the Conflict so inspiring is how the animation and location of problems of knowledge as “pieces” of the larger contest between The State, institutions of power and its penal subjects (ex-female combatants as prisoners). The paper has demonstrated that the body exists through and in culture, the product of signs and meanings, of discourse and practices. Design/methodology/approach This is primarily qualitative methodology underpinned by Foucauldian theory. There were 28 women and 20 men interviewed in the course of this research came from across Ireland, some came from cities and others came from rural areas. Some had spent time in prisons in the UK and others served time in the Republic of Ireland or in the North of Ireland. Many prisoners experienced being on the run and all experienced levels of brutality at the hands of the State. Ethical approval was granted from the Queens University Research Committee. Findings This paper only examines the experiences of female ex-combatants and their narratives of imprisonment. What this paper clearly shows through the narratives of the women is the gendered nature of imprisonment and the role of power, resilience and resistance whilst in prison in Northern Ireland. The voices in this paper disturb and interrupt the silence surrounding the experiences of women political prisoners, who are a hidden population, whilst in prison. Research limitations/implications In terms of research impact, this qualitative research is on the first of its kind to explore both the experiential and discursive narratives of female ex-combatants of the Irish Conflict. The impact and reach of the research illustrates how confinement revealed rich theoretical insights, drawing from Foucauldian theory, to examine the dialectical interplay between power and the subjective mobilisation of resistance practices of ex-combatants in prison in Northern Ireland. The wider point of prison policy and practice not meeting basic human rights or enhancing the quality of life of such prisoners reveals some of the dystopian features of current prison policy and lack of gender sensitivity to female combatants. Practical implications It is by prioritising the voices of the women combatants in this paper that it not only enables their re-positioning at the centre of the struggle, but also moves away methodologically from the more typical sole emphasis on structural conditions and political processes. Instead, prioritising the voices of the women combatants places the production of subjectivities and agencies at the centre, and explores their dialectical relationship to objective conditions and practical constraints. Social implications It is clear from the voices of the female combatants and in their social engagement in the research that the prison experience was marked specifically by assaults on their femininity, to which they were the more vulnerable due to the emphasis on sexual modesty within their socialisation and within the ethno-nationalist iconography of femininity. The aggression directed against them seems, in part, to have been a form of gender-based sexual violence in direct retaliation for the threat posed to gender norms by their assumption of the (ostensibly more powerful) role as combatants. They countered this by methods which foregrounded their collective identity as soldiers and their identification with their male comrades in “the same struggle”. Originality/value This paper is one of the first to explore the importance of the experiences of female former combatants during the Northern Irish Conflict with specific reference to their experience of imprisonment. The aim of this significant paper is to situate the critical analysis grounded in Foucauldian theory drawing on theoretical tools of power, resistance and subjectivity in order to make sense of women’s experiences of conflict and imprisonment in Ireland. It is suggested that power and resistance need to be re-appropriated in order to examine such unique gendered experiences that have been hidden in mainstream criminological accounts of the Irish Conflict.


International Review of Victimology | 1999

Book Review: The Penal System — An Introduction — Second EditionThe Penal System — An Introduction — Second Edition. CavadinoMichael & DignanJames,Sage; London, 1997. pp. 352 ISBN 0-7619-5328-0. £14.99.

Azrini Wahidin

correct or appropriate. The author makes a clear case for further research to examine what might be appropriate for women in such circumstances. However, the relevance of this study goes beyond this particular substantive area of concern. In particular I found its discussion and analysis of the tensions between what has been identified as police canteen culture and police behaviour one of the most thoughtful I have read. It makes the case that canteen culture is just one way of managing the nature and difficulties of policework: of ensuring some solidarity and back-up for each other on the street. It does not mean that police officers translate these rhetorical devices into practices which dictate the way in which they behave in relation to individual incidents with members of the public. Policy makers and politicians who assume that police behaviour can be read off from the canteen culture would do well to look at this study. In addition I found the willingness of this study to challenge what seem to have become the conventional understandings associated with responding to domestic violence, often led by rather simplistic feminist rhetoric on this topic, both refreshing and thoughtfully presented. I would heartily recommend this book to anyone wanting to develop their understanding of how policing and the criminal justice system really works, on any issue. This is an excellent study which deserves further dissemination. Sandra Walklate Professor of Sociology Manchester Metropolitan University, UK.


Archive | 2006

Foucault and aging

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin


Archive | 2007

OLD AGE AND VICTIMS: A CRITICAL EXEGESIS AND AN AGENDA FOR CHANGE

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin


Journal of Aging and Identity | 2001

The Loss of Aging Identity: Social Theory, Old Age, and the Power of Special Hospitals

Azrini Wahidin; Jason L. Powell


Archive | 2009

Risk and Social Welfare

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin


International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy | 2007

Risk and Old Age in Western Society

Jason L. Powell; Azrini Wahidin; Jens O. Zinn

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Jens O. Zinn

University of Melbourne

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