“…Through the analysis of this example of hybridization of punishment, we also want to contribute to the study of punishment of indigenous peoples in postcolonial societies in at least two ways: first, most of the studies on punishment of indigenous peoples in postcolonial societies have focused on their criminalization and overrepresentation in the criminal justice system, particularly prisons, as a form of discrimination and oppression, originating in colonial times, that continued after the independence of the former colonies (Anthony and Blagg, 2019; Blagg and Anthony, 2019; Cesaroni et al, 2019; Cunneen, 2006, 2014; Edney, 2002; Hogg, 2001; Mebane Cruz, 2015; Snowball and Weatherburn, 2007). Nevertheless, the study of the hybridization of indigenous and state punishment in postcolonial countries (for instance, through the indigenization of state prisons and the spatial and symbolic introduction of the jail of the White men to ancestral territories), though promising, is still incipient.…”