Everyday Prison Governance in Myanmar is the first major study to go beyond the celebrated world of the countrys political prisoners and deep into the relations, emotions and travails of its ordinary detainees. Through close descriptions and affecting narratives, it carries the reader along with the rhythms of petty bureaucracy, mundane brutality and the exchange economies of imprisonment in this erstwhile British colony. Painstakingly documented, thoughtfully presented and persuasively argued, this is a model of collaborative ethnographic research and writing on one of the most consequential yet misunderstood institutions in our time. -- Nick Cheesman, Australian National University This is a timely and urgent book that is co-produced by a long-standing and world leading expert on Global Prisons, and a research team firmly anchored in Myanmar, who are integral to every aspect of the research process. Myanmar, like so many nations in this part of the Global Southeast, remains woefully hidden and misunderstood by world Criminologists and policy makers concerned with reducing the damage and destruction of criminal justice and penality. Empirically grounded, yet theoretically sophisticated, this book builds on, upends, and extends how penalscapes emerge as hyper regulatory, authoritarian, and militarized. The work creates a necessary discomfort that is disruptive not only to how we come to produce bodies of Criminological knowledge from the Global North and metropoles dotted around the world. Moreover, it re-centers an age-old inconvenient truth, that Criminology, broadly defined, sits at a moment of great reckoning: it cannot, it must not, marginalize the voices and audiences that sit in the spaces of activism and resistance. -- Professor Laura Piacentini, PhD, FRSE, Fellow AcademiaNet An exceptionally sensitive portrayal of prison life in Myanmar, the book stands out for its bold focus on prison dynamics beyond the western prison, and a profound ethnographic sensibility marked by an emphasis on the ordinary prisoner and the entanglements of prison worlds. Presenting a uniquely collaborative endeavour that brings forth a polyphony of prison voices it is a must-read for anyone interested in the politics of incarceration in the contemporary world. -- Mahuya Bandyopadhyay, Professor, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, Indian Institute of Technology Delhi