[Tps] Question - How policy travels across time and space
Les Levidow
L.Levidow at open.ac.uk
Mon Nov 12 15:23:45 EST 2007
>-----Original Message-----
>From: lk180 at columbia.edu [mailto:lk180 at columbia.edu]
>Sent: maandag 12 november 2007 16:40
>To: Dvora Yanow
>Subject: Question re: how policy/travels across time and place
>
>I am working on a huge project in which I am tracing the geneology of US
>incarceration and detention practices in the "War on Terror" back across
>time and place. I am trying to see where some of the micropractices of
>detention have emerged and how they have changed over time. I know there
>are certain specific "nodes" which are considered crucial in transmission
>of such practices: US in Vietnam and before that in Philippines; Britain
>in the Boer War and then Malaya, Kenya, Aden and Norther Ireland; France
>in Vietnam and then Algeria; and then Israel in Lebanon and Palestine.
>What connects them all is that they are all ostensibly liberal democracies
>with extremelly illiberal counterinsurgency practices, especially when it
>come to detention etc
Laleh
Probably Abu Ghraib etc. has colonial analogies, but we should also look closer
to home at the US 'civilian' prison system, along with the concept of an
internal colony.
See the article by
Avery Gordon, Abu Ghraib: imprisonment and the war on terror
Race and Class Vol. 48(1): 4259, 2006
Les
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