April 01, 2020

Reiko Hillyer Awarded Franklin Research Grant

We are delighted to share the good news that Associate Professor of History Reiko Hillyer has been awarded a Franklin Research Grant by the American Philosophical Society for her book project, “Windows in the Walls: The Permeability of the Prison and the Rise of Mass Incarceration.”

We are delighted to share the good news that Associate Professor of History Reiko Hillyer has been awarded a Franklin Research Grant by the American Philosophical Society for her book project, “Windows in the Walls: The Permeability of the Prison and the Rise of Mass Incarceration.” This manuscript will examine the “thickening” of prison walls in the post-war period and demonstrate that the U.S. prison was much more permeable in the era prior to mass incarceration. Dr. Hillyer’s research explores the decline of practices throughout the twentieth century—including but not limited to releasing prisoners for holidays, visiting sick relatives, allowing temporary furloughs, participation in prison ministries and volunteering—that that had allowed incarcerated people to transcend the prison’s physical boundaries. Each chapter in Dr. Hillyer’s book, which she expects to complete during 2020-21, will center on particular practices that connected incarcerated individuals to the outside world, and the increasing normalization of prison’s invisibility and solitary confinement.

The Franklin program is designed to support the costs of conducting research, including travel to libraries and archives, and Dr. Hillyer will use this competitive funding during her sabbatical to conduct research in the Massachusetts State Archives, the California State Archives, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, and the Billy Graham Center at Wheaton College in Illinois.