Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/30197
Author(s): Agarez, R. C.
Macedo, M.
Date: 2023
Title: Punishment, re-education and agriculture: Portuguese internal and imperial penal colonisation in the nineteenth century
Journal title: The Journal of Architecture
Volume: 28
Number: 7
Pages: 1152 - 1183
Reference: Agarez, R. C., & Macedo, M. (2023). Punishment, re-education and agriculture: Portuguese internal and imperial penal colonisation in the nineteenth century. The Journal of Architecture, 28(7), 1152-1183. https://doi.org/10.1080/13602365.2023.2289959
ISSN: 1360-2365
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1080/13602365.2023.2289959
Abstract: This paper considers a set of Portuguese state-funded projects for agricultural colonisation using coerced subjects. In the second half of the nineteenth century, mounting urbanisation, joblessness, and deprivation, resulting in depopulated countryside and a fractious urban milieu, drove experts to seek international examples for institutionalisation and rehabilitation through agricultural labour. Placing those classified as ‘criminals’ but also new outlaw categories such as ‘beggars’ and ‘vagrants’, as well as ‘undisciplined’ and ‘unimputable’ minors, at the forefront of colonising initiatives in areas characterised as empty or unproductive gave rhetorical impetus to settlement plans and to claims of territorial sovereignty and self-sufficiency in imperial and metropolitan contexts. The article examines a range of experiments: in Alentejo in southern Portugal, where the youth re-education colony of Vila Fernando was the country’s counterpart to the French colonie of Mettray, and in Angola, where penal colonies for exiled convicts supported the effective occupation of the hinterland. We argue that, despite their differences, metropolitan and imperial projects can be addressed using the same analytical framework as they share an allied set of practices, cultures, technologies, and agents, mobilised to achieve common goals: economic exploitation, population and territory management, confinement, discipline, punishment, and re-education.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:DINÂMIA'CET-RI - Artigos em revistas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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