The historical treatment of girls and young women confined in houses of refuge, reformatories, residential treatment centers, and training schools gets too little attention in reference textbooks on juvenile justice. To help fill in the missing history, Prison Public Memory Project contributor Russ Immarigeon has been working on the development of several bibliographies. This one is focused on major works on incarcerating girls and juvenile justice in the United States: Refuges, Reformatories, and Training Schools for Girls: A Bibliography of Historical Studies.
We are grateful to the New York Council for the Humanities for contributing to the development of this important resource for scholars, public historians, teachers, librarians, journalists, local history detectives, and others interested in researching girls’ incarceration. These bibliographies will grow with further investigation, as well as through suggestions from readers. If you have, or know of, documents that might be included, please contact the Prison Public Memory Project at info@prisonpublicmemory.us.
3 comments
Kathleen Hulser says:
Nov 12, 2013
This is very useful and a great resource to jump start students on a research project. THanks.
Alexandra Cox says:
Mar 24, 2014
This is a fantastic resource. It is really one of a kind. I have found it extremely useful in helping me to frame the historical context for my current book project.
Editor says:
Mar 24, 2014
Thanks Alexandra! We’ll be sure to let Russ Immarigeon know. And keep us posted on your book…