The usual notion of incarceration suggests specific locations in a given society: prisons or, in gentler form, psychiatric institutions. This notion will be incorporated in the text in various and much broader contexts. We investigate civilizations and their specific cultures in terms of their compositions which may "incarcerate" a person without specific facilities: More recent and still continuous examples are Fascistic and Communist empires, or traditional autocratic and theocratic systems. In addition, there are civilizations which, while open and democratic, might exclude various groups from participation due to education, race, or class status--and such exclusion may not be regarded as "incarceration." One prevalent form of autocratic incarceration is the control of education and literature available to the citizens. There are other forms which subject a group, or an entire civilization, to "incarceration" due to colonialisms and their usual "monological" imposition of totalizing discourse as a criterion for what is civilized and what is not, all the way to what is human and what is not adequate to be regarded as human. The monological form also applies to totalizing discourses in modern "sciences" and technical fields, offering "explanations" of every facet of human behavior. The trend is a push for "education" only in technical fields. It is also imperative to investigate the various contemporary trends in cultural theories which propose multi-cultural "methods" without attending to the issue of the illogical nature of such methods. Finally, we address the current debates of global migrations, immigrations, and the issues as to the status of persons caught in such movements with regard to "legal" questions. This issue is confronted by the emergence of "populisms" and "nationalisms" worldwide, and a usually avoided question, "Why there is a denouncement of the West by members of various civilizations and their cultures, and yet the demand that only the West should welcome "the others."
Of course, the families are carefully selected—the wrong family—patient link could harm the patient's recovery and could endanger the family. Sensible, unsentimental people are looked for who will give the patient perhaps his first ...
Drawing on oral history, fictive portrayals, walking methodologies, and ethnographic and arts-based research, the text pays attention to issues of gender, sexuality, age, ethnicity, mobility and nationality as they intersect with lived and ...
The first essay uses 1979 panel of the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth to examine the implications of incarceration rates for men's marital prospects. I find that black men are...
Bringing together key scholars in criminology and penology from across Europe and beyond, this book maps and describes trends of privatising punishment throughout Europe, paying attention both to prisons and community sanctions.
Carceral Spaces: Mobility and Agency in Imprisonment and Migrant Detention
Bringing together leading international researchers, this book reframes the political economy of punishment, analysing penality within the current economic situation and connecting contemporary penal changes with political and cultural ...
Inside Outlaws: A Prison Diary
In this volume, scholars of pre-modern Europe and the Arab world examine the issues of incarceration and slavery.
Sancocho de mico: relatos alimentarios de exsecuestrados políticos de las Fuerzas Armadas Revolucionarias de Colombia (FARC-EP)
""Gates of Injustice"" is a compelling expose of the U.S. prison system: it tells how more than 2 million Americans came to be incarcerated ... what it's really like on the inside ... and how; Alan Elsner paints a terrifying picture of how ...