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Robin F. Hansen, "Prison Born: Incarceration and Motherhood in the Colonial Shadow" (U Regina Press, 2024)

Dec 26, 2025
In a compelling discussion, Robin F. Hansen, an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Saskatchewan, dives into her work on the intersections of incarceration and motherhood, particularly for Indigenous women in Canada. She recalls how a pregnant inmate's call sparked her project, highlighting the horrific practice of automatic mother-infant separation post-birth. Hansen critiques the colonial biases in legal systems that dehumanize both mothers and their children, emphasizing the need for reforms to protect their rights and ensure better practices in the justice system.
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ANECDOTE

From Call To Courtroom

  • Robin F. Hansen recounts receiving a call from a pregnant incarcerated Indigenous woman and then representing her on appeal.
  • The woman's sentence was changed to house arrest and Hansen remains in contact with her.
INSIGHT

Colonial Logic Behind Automatic Separation

  • Hansen shifted from a race-neutral childcare lens to seeing automatic mother-infant separation as rooted in colonial ideologies.
  • She used spatialized justice and systems theory to trace how legal communications produce that outcome.
INSIGHT

Underfunded Systems Amplify Harm

  • Prison conditions impede access to counsel and timely medical care, amplifying harm for pregnant incarcerated people.
  • Underfunded systems facilitate procedural silence and human-rights violations like delayed treatment and shackling.
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