Teaching Prison Abolition to Criminology Students

Critical Reflections on a Pedagogy of De-Initiation

Authors

  • Roberto Catello Liverpool Hope University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14288/ce.v16i3.187020

Keywords:

abolitionist pedagogy, criminal justice reform, critical pedagogy, education as initiation, neoliberal university, prison abolition

Abstract

The abolitionist movement is gaining momentum in the United States and the United Kingdom and calls to shrink the carceral state have become a staple of grassroots movements and activist groups fighting for a more just world in the 21st century. The role played by higher education (HE) educators in this struggle for a world without prisons is an important and yet difficult one, as they can expose university students to abolitionist ideas but have to do so in the context of a HE sector that is increasingly governed by neoliberal logics of marketization and professionalization. In this article, I reflect on my own experience teaching prison abolition to criminology students at Liverpool Hope University (LHU). The article revisits Richard Stanley Peters’ notion of education as initiation to show how an abolitionist pedagogy grounded in critical perspectives on punishment can be practiced to de-initiate students from criminological common sense and reformism.

Author Biography

Roberto Catello, Liverpool Hope University

Dr Roberto Catello is a Lecturer in Criminology at Liverpool Hope University, Honorary Fellow with the School of Social and Political Sciences at the University of Melbourne, and Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (FHEA). Dr Catello is a critical criminologist with an interest in historical criminology and abolitionist pedagogies.

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Published

2025-08-15

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Section

Articles