Colonial narrative on reform and criminality of prisoners
Author(s): Anshuman Srivastava
Abstract: The present study critically examines the colonial discourse on prison reform and criminality in nineteenth-century India, highlighting how these notions were strategically employed to consolidate imperial authority. The objective is twofold: first, to analyze the colonial states use of reform as a tool of governance rooted in racialized perceptions of incorrigible offenders, and second, to situate the voices of administrators and committees who sought practical prison improvements within the wider context of colonization. The material is drawn from primary sources such as the 1838 and 1864 Jail Committee Reports, the 1877 Jail Conference proceedings, provincial jail reports, and relevant colonial legal statutes including the Criminal Tribes Act of 1871 and sections of the Criminal Procedure Code. A qualitative historical method was applied, interpreting archival reports, statistics, and policy documents to trace the continuities and contradictions between imperial discourse and provincial administration.
Results reveal that the central colonial narrative emphasized the futility of reforms by portraying prisoners as habitual offenders resistant to moral improvement, thereby legitimizing punitive discipline and executive authority. Overcrowding, poor sanitation, and high mortality in prisons were persistently noted, yet often attributed to prisoners lax morality rather than structural economic crises such as famines and rising grain prices. Provincial reports, however, implicitly acknowledged the role of subsistence crises in fueling property-related offences, contradicting central claims. Furthermore, corporal punishment, particularly whipping, emerged as a contested but significant mechanism of control, reflecting divergent views between central and provincial authorities.
The conclusion underscores that colonial penal policies were less about genuine reform and more about enforcing racial hierarchies, social control, and the regulation of economically distressed populations. Prisons thus served not only as sites of confinement but as mirrors of wider colonial political economy, where reform masked coercion and systemic exploitation.
DOI: 10.22271/27069109.2025.v7.i1a.510Pages: 56-60 | Views: 662 | Downloads: 253Download Full Article: Click Here
How to cite this article:
Anshuman Srivastava.
Colonial narrative on reform and criminality of prisoners. Int J Hist 2025;7(1):56-60. DOI:
10.22271/27069109.2025.v7.i1a.510