Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/37288
Author(s): Zoettl, P. A.
Date: 2026
Title: Every man for himself and all for one: Crime, prison culture and marginality in Lisbon, Portugal
Journal title: Ethnos
Volume: N/A
Reference: Zoettl, P. A. (2026). Every man for himself and all for one: Crime, prison culture and marginality in Lisbon, Portugal. Ethnos. https://doi.org/10.1080/00141844.2026.2657939
ISSN: 0014-1844
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1080/00141844.2026.2657939
Keywords: Agency
Crime
Marginality
Portugal
Power
Prison
Respect
Violence
Youth
Abstract: Doing time in prison is a common experience for many young people from Portugal’s economically disadvantaged urban peripheries. Prison conditions are harsh and sentences are long, particularly for drug and property offences. This article discusses the simultaneously individual and collective nature of prison life, and how inmates cope with a hostile environment that threatens their emotional and physical integrity. Traditional models of prison culture are inadequate to describe Portuguese prison society: it is only to a limited extent the result of prisoners adapting to the deprivations experienced inside, and it has little to do with supposed criminal subcultures imported from the outside. Instead, prison in Portugal has become just another venue for the ongoing struggle of marginalised citizens who seek to maintain a modicum of personal agency under adverse circumstances. The article argues that inmate culture in Portugal converges with a generalised culture of marginality, spawned by the late-liberal segregation of undesirable identities in suburban socioscapes spurned by dominant society.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CEI-RI - Artigos em revista científica internacional com arbitragem científica

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