ABSTRACT

Conceived in the immediate aftermath of the humiliations and killings of prisoners in Afghanistan and Iraq, of the suicides and hunger strikes at Guantanamo Bay and of the disappearances of detainees through extraordinary rendition, this book explores the connections between these shameful events and the inhumanity and degradation of domestic prisons within the 'allied' states, including the USA, Canada, Australia, the UK and Ireland.

The central theme is that the revelations of extreme brutality perpetrated by allied soldiers represent the inevitable end-product of domestic incarceration predicated on the use of extreme violence including lethal force. Exposing as fiction the claim to the political moral high ground made by western liberal democracies is critical because such claims animate and legitimate global actions such as the 'war on terror' and the indefinite detention of tens of thousands of people by the United States which accompanies it. The myth of moral virtue works to hide, silence, minimize and deny the brutal continuing history of violence and incarceration both within western countries and undertaken on behalf of western states beyond their national borders.

chapter 1|18 pages

The Violence of Incarceration

An Introduction

chapter 3|23 pages

Entombing Resistance

Institutional Power and Polarisation in the Jika Jika High-Security Unit

chapter 5|21 pages

Child Incarceration

Institutional Abuse, the Violent State and the Politics of Impunity

chapter 6|17 pages

Naked Power

Strip Searching in Women's Prisons

chapter 8|19 pages

Neither Kind Nor Gentle

The Perils of 'Gender Responsive Justice'

chapter 9|23 pages

The United States Military Prison

The Normalcy of Exceptional Brutality1

chapter 10|22 pages

A Reign of Penal Terror

United States Global Statecraft and the Technology of Punishment and Capture

chapter 11|16 pages

Indigenous Incarceration

The Violence of Colonial Law and Justice