Teaching Anthropology in a Women's Prison, On the Edge of a $100 Million Sex 
Abuse Scandal
by BRIAN McKENNA
 

Every prison has a story. At the Robert Scott Correctional Facility, in 
Michigan, the women were not allowed to touch one another or risk a “major 
misconduct.” Sharing, even a small piece of candy, was against prison policy 
and women were written up for lending a smoke.
Surveillance was 24/7 and when you got the snow detail, you could expect to be 
awakened at 2:30 AM for a three hour stretch out in the freezing cold picking 
ice with a plastic shovel. The work, when they could get it, was virtual slave 
labor with full day shifts making dental materials.
 
The Governor, Jennifer Granholm, ordered the Christmas lights off the year I 
taught there to save money. Christmas exploded when one prison guard brutally 
murdered another guard at the gas station across the street. Many prisoners 
heard the fatal bullets. It turns out the shooter had been bullied severely by 
the victim and took out his recourse in this violent way. Later he shot himself 
in the chest but recovered. Needless to say the women were highly distressed by 
all this. Not only did they know the guards (and sympathies went different 
ways), but the killing brought back tough memories of other shootings, often of 
abusive husbands. There was no counseling for the women.
 
full: http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/06/01/michigans-abu-ghraib/
 
Thank you to Tim Wallace:
A version of this article was originally published in the Society for Applied 
Anthropology Newsletter, Vol. 23:2, May 2012. Tim Wallace, editor. 
http://www.sfaa.net/newsletter/may12nl.pdf
 
 


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