Millennials Are Killing Capitalism

Prison Death-Worlds, COVID-19, and the Fatal Convenience of Crisis with Dalton Lackey and Teagan Murphy

Nov 2, 2025
Dalton Lackey and Teagan Murphy, Sociology PhD candidates from the University of Maryland, delve into the intersection of carcerality and crisis, critiquing how prisons exploited COVID-19. They challenge the notion of institutional failure, arguing instead for a narrative of calculated cruelty that exacerbates existing inequalities. They explore how crises evolved prison tactics, revealing deep-rooted issues like overcrowding and isolation. Through inmates' narratives, they highlight the psychological impact of punitive regimes, reshaping our understanding of life within these death-worlds.
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INSIGHT

Crisis Was Used, Not Just Mismanaged

  • Framing COVID outbreaks in prisons as mere 'failure' obscures deliberate institutional aims.
  • Teagan and Dalton argue prisons operated as intended, using crisis to deepen control and harm.
INSIGHT

Emergency Grants Tactical Advantages

  • Prisons exploit emergencies to evolve tactics with less oversight and new resources.
  • Dalton shows crises create opportunities to expand control, surveillance, and punitive measures.
ANECDOTE

132 Prisoner Essays Fueled Their Analysis

  • The authors collected 132 submissions from the American Prison Writing Archive and coded themes collaboratively.
  • Teagan describes dividing essays, coding, and synthesizing common patterns on whiteboards.
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