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This ground-breaking collection examines the erosion of the legal boundaries traditionally dividing civil detention from criminal punishment. The contributors empirically demonstrate how the mentally ill, non-citizen immigrants, and enemy combatants are treated like criminals in Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States.
Auteur
Efrat Arbel, University of British Columbia, Canada.
Hadar Aviram, University of California, USA.
Thomas Blair, University of California, USA.
Mary Bosworth, University of Oxford, UK.
Kelly Hannah-Moffat, University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada.
Dave Holmes, University of Ottawa, Canada.
Yvonne Jewkes, University of Leicester, UK.
Emma Kaufman, Yale Law School, USA.
Amy Klassen, University of Toronto Mississauga, Canada.
Alexa Koenig, University of California, Berkeley, USA.
Alison Liebling, University of Cambridge, UK.
Mona Lynch, University of California, Irvine, USA.
Marc Mauer, The Sentencing Project, USA.
Stuart J. Murray, University of Ottawa, Canada.
Nadya Pittendrigh, University of Illinois at Chicago, USA.
Keramet Reiter, University of California, USA.
Sarah Turnbull, University of Oxford.
Sam Weiss, American Civil Liberties Union, Center for Justice, USA.
Résumé
'A deeply disturbing and very powerful anthology on the use of "extreme punishments" in the United States, England, and Canada. Professors Reiter and Koenig present a collection of excellent essays that covers topics such as the use of solitary confinement, supermax prisons, immigration detentions, and the "social death" of detention in Guantanamo. The book is unique and especially important in showing how this transcends a single nation and how it involves many different forms of punishments that are cruel and inhumane. This book deserves a wide readership and should be the catalyst for long overdue change.'
Phantasms of criminality drive our elected officials, our police, our state, our nation - and, as we learn in these essays, the "free" world. Eye-opening and trail-blazing in its interdisciplinary contributions, Extreme Punishment confronts the penal and disciplinary regimes of the United States, Canada, and the United Kingdom. And in the process, these exemplary writers and scholars take us on a chilling journey through the terrain of detention and punishment. Groundbreaking in its research and documentation, this bracing collection forces us to think again - and in unexpected ways - about how law abets and sustains a global network of military, immigration, and penal polices, unprecedented in their severity and reach.'
Contenu
Foreword; Marc Mauer
Introduction; Alexa Koenig and Keramet Reiter
Fear-Suffused Hell-Holes: The Architecture of Extreme Punishment; Yvonne Jewkes
The Limits of Punishment; Emma Kaufman and Sam Weiss
Immigration Detention and the Expansion of Penal Power in the United Kingdom; Mary Bosworth and Sarah Turnbull
(Im)migrating Penal Excess: Sheriff Joe Arpaio and the Case of Maricopa County, Arizona; Mona Lynch
A New 'Ecology of Cruelty'? The Changing Shape of Maximum Security Custody in England and Wales; Alison Liebling
Seclusive Space: Crisis Confinement, and Behavior Modification in Canadian Forensic Psychiatric Settings; Stuart J. Murray and Dave Holmes
Normalizing Exceptions: Solitary Confinement and the Micro-Politics of Risk/Need; Kelly Hannah-Moffat and Amy Klassen
Making Visible Invisible Suffering: Non-Deliberative Agency and the Bodily Rhetoric of Tamms Supermax Prisoners; Nadya Pittendrigh
Punishing Mental Illness: Trans-Institutionalization and Solitary Confinement in the United States; Keramet Reiter and Thomas Blair
Between Protection and Punishment: The Irregular Arrival Regime in Canadian Refugee Law; Efrat Arbel
From Man to Beast: Social Death at Guantánamo; Alexa Koenig
Afterword: Hadar Aviram