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detention/prison
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Journal Article
Social Text (2023) 41 (3 (156)): 1–34.
Published: 01 September 2023
... of criminalization and mass incarceration and thus articulated as a project of prison abolitionism. Importantly, migrant detention and deportation comprise another major pillar of the entrenchment of the carceral state. While critical migration scholarship and No Borders activism have been confronted...
Journal Article
Social Text (2010) 28 (4 (105)): 1–24.
Published: 01 December 2010
... private and state-run
prisons that currently house approximately 400,000 migrants in ICE cus-
tody.28 Even as the DHS modifies its design for immigration detention, its
reforms leave intact the punitive apparatus of immigration detention and
Social...
Journal Article
Social Text (2013) 31 (4 (117)): 1–24.
Published: 01 December 2013
...). Detention cells
were not politically citable. The secrecy did not concern the existence of
detainees, which was public knowledge, but the locations of the cells in
which they were held. Through local subjugated knowledge I discovered
a detention center hidden inside Colombo’s main prison for common...
Journal Article
Social Text (2008) 26 (1 (94)): 59–74.
Published: 01 March 2008
...
was charged with allegedly planning to bomb a Columbus-area shopping
mall. At the end of July 2007, Abdi pleaded guilty to one count of con-
spiracy to provide material support to terrorists. Under his plea agreement,
Abdi will serve ten years in prison, pay...
Journal Article
Social Text (2020) 38 (2 (143)): 19–47.
Published: 01 June 2020
... the earlier CIA experiments and the baseline sensory deprivation practiced in post-2001 CIA detention and rendition. 18 Although covering the eyes and ears of prisoners in transit is often explained by the CIA and defense officials as a method for protecting the anonymity of covert agents, sensory...
FIGURES
Journal Article
Social Text (2011) 29 (1 (106)): 127–149.
Published: 01 March 2011
... being sub-
jected to indefinite detention as a so-called enemy combatant in the U.S.
prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, Abu Zubaydah was tortured within
the CIA’s offshore prison network: he was reportedly incarcerated in
Thailand, Poland, Jordan, and Diego Garcia, among other...
Journal Article
Social Text (2007) 25 (2 (91)): 103–142.
Published: 01 June 2007
... for
their traumatized selves. At best, a more expeditious and efficacious pro- possibility of
cessing has been advocated.
The context for the violence was, quite simply, mass detention. This being captured,
is the prison nation abroad identified by Michelle Brown.23 But here one...
Journal Article
Social Text (2016) 34 (3 (128)): 75–102.
Published: 01 September 2016
... beyond its eastern and southeastern borders, as junior partners deputized to police the effectively virtual European border. Today, following decolonization for untold millions of people who were largely confined to the mass prison labor camps that were Europe’s colonies, Europe is now confronted...
Journal Article
Social Text (2019) 37 (4 (141)): 1–21.
Published: 01 December 2019
... their countries for various reasons. Because of the number of immigrants who do claim asylum when caught at the border, President Bush mandated the construction of detention centers for families (or the conversion of prisons for this purpose). The population headed to these centers, however, ballooned in 2014...
Journal Article
Social Text (2014) 32 (2 (119)): 25–51.
Published: 01 June 2014
... of sounding is controlled by one
party absolutely.16 Here’s what she has to say about the practice, widespread
throughout the Bush years, of bombarding shackled prisoners with loud
music for hours on end in detention facilities connected with what...
Journal Article
Social Text (2008) 26 (1 (94)): 3–28.
Published: 01 March 2008
... sedimentalized (and continues to be sedimentalized) through
coercive forms of power — soldiers, weaponry, prisons, detention camps,
and other military apparatuses — contributing to an overly present, if also
transnationalized state apparatus.
— Jana Evans Braziel, “Haiti...
Journal Article
Social Text (2020) 38 (1 (142)): 131–151.
Published: 01 March 2020
..., mobilize large numbers of people to participate in movements actively rather than solely participating online or through voting, and offer spaces to practice new social relations. The article looks at examples from efforts for migrant justice, police and prison abolition, disaster relief, and other...
Journal Article
Social Text (2016) 34 (4 (129)): 87–110.
Published: 01 December 2016
... the use of indefinite administrative detention inside Israeli prisons and on several occasions embarked on large-scale mass arrests of people with purported Hamas ties. 25 The same was true with respect to targeted deportation, a tactic used on a number of occasions to expel prominent organizers...
Journal Article
Social Text (2005) 23 (2 (83)): 109–131.
Published: 01 June 2005
...
degree of redress may occur: the label of “human rights violators,” social
to teach the shame and loss of power (as with Chile’s Pinochet), attempted extradition,
trials, convictions, prison sentences.
history of dissent, Andrew Ross calls this “far-fl ung...
Journal Article
Social Text (2020) 38 (1 (142)): 67–88.
Published: 01 March 2020
..., such as homeless shelters, the asylum, detention centers, and prison camps. As women and children move from the institution into home detention, certain legacies of the penal system move into the home as well. 56 However, other types of institutions, such as neighborhood and women’s collectives, offer new forms...
Journal Article
Social Text (2010) 28 (3 (104)): 39–65.
Published: 01 September 2010
...
apart by political turmoil and violence? To an experience of risking one’s
life on the open ocean in the hopes of landing on safer ground, only to
be “saved” by the world’s most powerful nation-state but then held cap-
tive in a prison camp? To an experience of being diagnosed with a little...
Journal Article
Social Text (2018) 36 (4 (137)): 1–20.
Published: 01 December 2018
... is the single fastest-growing sector of prison industries everywhere. (The GEO Group, for instance, is currently making enormous profits on detention centers for people detained and held by ICE [Immigration and Customs Enforcement] in the United States, and we should be tracking those profits.) In indefinite...
Journal Article
Social Text (2004) 22 (2 (79)): 117–139.
Published: 01 June 2004
... of yet
another child molester or rapist sentenced by corrupt courts to a couple of
short years in prison or on parole. It is not hate that makes the white
workingman curse about the latest boatload of aliens dumped on our shores
to be given job preference over the white citizen who...
Journal Article
Social Text (2016) 34 (4 (129)): 111–138.
Published: 01 December 2016
... Wilson Gilmore and Laleh Khalili, whose works bring modes of incapacitation in the prison industrial complex in conversation with the technologies of detention, rendition, and torture of the War on Terror. 10 The phrase the gloves come off declared by Cofer Black in the opening epigraph represents...
Journal Article
Social Text (2007) 25 (2 (91)): 53–79.
Published: 01 June 2007
..., in theory at least,
the American prison system is a juridical institution where techniques of
discipline meet up with the sovereign power of the law. By contrast, these
are sites, as Judith Butler has noted, of “indefinite detention,” where even
the formality of a sovereign decision concerning...
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