In this bold book, A. Naomi Paik grapples with the history of U.S. prison camps that have confined people outside the boundaries of legal and civil rights. Removed from the social and political communities that would guarantee fundamental legal protections, these detainees are effectively rightless, stripped of the right even to have rights. Rightless people thus expose an essential paradox: while the United States purports to champion inalienable rights at home and internationally, it has built its global power in part by creating a regime of imprisonment that places certain populations perceived as threats beyond rights. The United States' status as the guardian of rights coincides with, indeed depends on, its creation of rightlessness. Yet rightless people are not silent. Drawing from an expansive testimonial archive of legal proceedings, truth commission records, poetry, and experimental video, Paik shows how rightless people use their imprisonment to protest U.S. state violence. She examines demands for redress by Japanese Americans interned during World War II, testimonies of HIV-positive Haitian refugees detained at Guantanamo in the early 1990s, and appeals by Guantanamo's enemy combatants from the War on Terror. In doing so, she reveals a powerful ongoing contest over the nature and meaning of the law, over civil liberties and global human rights, and over the power of the state in people's lives.
"Human rights promise equal personhood regardless of citizenship status, yet their existing formulations are tied to the principle of territorial sovereignty.
Racialized Rightlessness and the Criminalization of the Unprotected Lisa Marie Cacho ... 70; freedom as “gift,” 7–8, 171n24; as personal property, 24 Sloop, John M., 205n80 Smith, Andrea, 191–92n124 Smith, Barbara Herrnstein, 56, ...
Gundogdu offers a critical inquiry of human rights by rethinking Hannah Arendt's political theory in the light of the challenging questions posed by contemporary struggles of migrants.
With reference to India.
human rights – as law, discourse and practices of rights claiming constituted in a 'symbiotic but tense relationship'3 – can ameliorate rightlessness. A range of varied theorisations of human rights rely on this underlying assumption ...
Five leading thinkers on the concept of ‘rights’ in an era of rightlessness Sixty years ago, the political theorist Hannah Arendt, an exiled Jew deprived of her German citizenship, observed that before people can enjoy any of the ...
Introduction -- The new liberal state -- Defending enterprise -- Pacific views -- Sagebrush rebels -- The politics of rights -- Governing from the right -- Mountains and sea -- To the slaughterhouse -- Epilogue : regulation and its ...
This is an essential read for those seeking clarity on one of the most divisive issues of our times. The book will be important long after the current electoral cycle is done.
The "story of Sano Halo's survival of the death march at age ten that annihilated her family--as told to her daughter, Thea--and the poignant mother-daughter pilgrimage to Turkey in search of Sano's home seventy years after her exile.
Angela Davis and Ruth Wilson Gilmore center intersectionality in their work on incarceration, while earlier scholars such as Michel Foucault failed to do so. See Davis, “Race, Gender, and Prison History”; Gilmore, Golden Gulag; ...